by David Drake
The APC’s commander had his head out of the cupola hatch to conn his vehicle. He’d started to duck, but Huber’s first bolt decapitated him in a cyan flash. The rest of the burst splashed on the cupola, setting off an anti-tank missile in a gushing yellow low-order explosion.
Huber’d pulled the APC’s teeth by wrecking the turret. Without spending more rounds—Fencing Master would be through the Dragoons and gone before the infantry in the rear compartment could unass their vehicle and start shooting—he swung his gun toward the APC that he’d assigned both to himself and the car to the left, Sergeant Nagano’s Foghorn. Deseau and Learoyd were firing, and the forest echoed with the snarling thump of powerguns punctuated by the blast of the Dragoons’ weapons.
When Huber saw black exhaust puff from the far side of his target’s cupola, he knew he’d been too late to keep the gunner from loosing a missile. Though the cupola hadn’t rotated onto Fencing Master yet, as the missile came off the launch rails it made a hard angle toward the combat car on the thrust of its attitude jets.
“Via!” Huber screamed, knowing that now survival was in the hands of the Lord and Fencing Master’s Automatic Defense System. A segment of the ADS tripped, blasting a charge of osmium pellets from the explosive-filled groove where the car’s hull armor joined the plenum chamber skirts.
Fencing Master jumped and clanged. The pellets met the incoming missile, shoving it aside and tearing off pieces. The warhead didn’t detonate—a good thing, because this close it still would’ve been dangerous—but a shred of tailfin slashed Huber’s gunshield, leaving a bright scar across the oxidized surface.
Learoyd’s target, a forty-tonne guncarrier, went off like a huge bomb. The concussion spun Fencing Master like a top, slamming Huber against the side of the fighting compartment. Despite the helmet’s active shock cushioning, his vision shrank momentarily to a bright vertical line.
The guns of the Apex Dragoons used liquid propellant set off by a jolt of high current through tungsten wire. Besides adding electrical energy to the chemical charge, the method ignited the propellant instantly and maximized efficiency for any bore that could accept the pressures.
Learoyd’s burst had detonated the reservoir holding the charges for perhaps a hundred main-gun rounds. The explosion left a crater where the vehicle had been and a cloud of smoke mushrooming hundreds of meters in the air.
Fencing Master grounded twice, sucked down when the wave of low pressure followed the shock front. Padova fought her controls straight, then tried to steer the car back in the original direction; they’d spun more than a full turn counterclockwise and were now headed well to the left of the planned course.
The shockwave rocked the Dragoon APC up on its three starboard wheels. The vehicle didn’t spin because it was some distance farther from the blast and its tires provided more stability than the fluid coupling of pressurized air linking the combat car to the ground.
Huber’s eyesight cleared; his tribarrel already bore on the APC’s rear hull. He fired, working his burst forward while bolts from Deseau’s weapon crossed his. Their plasma shattered the light aluminum/ceramic sandwich armoring the APC’s side. The hatches blew open in geysers of black smoke which sucked in, then gushed as crimson flames.
Learoyd lay huddled on the floor of the fighting compartment. His left hand twitched, so at least he was alive. There was no time to worry about him now, not with all F-3 in danger.
Fencing Master drove between the two APCs, both oozing flames, and roared down the steep slope. Explosions thundered in the near distance. Huber glanced to his left as a ball of orange flame bubbled over the treetops. It had vanished some seconds before the ground rippled and the walls of the valley channeled a wave of dust and leaf litter past Fencing Master and on.
Huber pivoted his tribarrel to cover the rear. In shifting, he banged his right side on the coaming. The unexpected pain made him gasp. The blast had bruised him badly and maybe cracked some ribs.
Deseau took over the right wing gun. Learoyd had managed to get to his hands and knees, but it’d be a while before he was able to man his weapon again.
Or maybe it wouldn’t, come to think. Bert Learoyd had the tenacity of an earthworm, though perhaps coupled with an earthworm’s intellectual capacity.
Huber checked his C&C display. All six cars were still in action, though the icons for Foghorn and Farsi’s Fancy—car Three-seven in Jellicoe’s section—showed they were reporting battle damage.
Even the Slammers’ electronics couldn’t discriminate between the signatures of vehicles with some systems running though the crews were dead, and those which were fully functional. Apart from the occasional catastrophic explosion like that of Learoyd’s target, there was no way to be sure of how much of the hostile mechanized company remained dangerous. They’d taken a hammering, no mistake, but right now all Huber was concerned about was F-3’s survival. Thanks to Ander’s inaction, the Slammers had lost this battle before the first shot was fired.
The United Cities government had employed many small units of mercenaries instead of a few large formations, because no place on the planet except Port Plattner in Solace could land a starship big enough to hold a battalion and its equipment. Hammer’s Regiment was one of the largest units in UC pay, and some of the others were only platoons.
There would’ve been coordination problems even at best, but the real trouble arose because neither the UC nor any of the other Outer States had a military staff capable of planning and executing a war on the present scale. Colonel Hammer and his team at Base Alpha had taken over the duties because there was no one else to do it, but that caused further delays and confusion. Everything had to be relayed through UC officers who often didn’t understand the words they were parroting, and even so other mercenary captains dragged their feet on orders they knew were given by a peer.
Some UC units were incompetently led; that might well be the case with Ander’s Legion. Their communications systems varied radically; Central at Base Alpha could communicate with all of them, but many couldn’t talk to one another. And some mercenary captains, especially those who commanded only a company or platoon, were less concerned with winning wars than they were with protecting the soldiers who were their entire capital.
Those were staff problems, but they became the concern of line lieutenants like Arne Huber when they meant that his combat cars were left swinging in the breeze. Ander hadn’t gotten the word, or he hadn’t obeyed orders, or he was simply too bumbling to advance when he was supposed to.
There was an obvious risk of further Solace units following close behind the initial company of Dragoons, but despite that Huber had a bad feeling about continuing on his plotted course to the southeast. He’d already asked his AI to assess alternate routes, but before he got the answers the C&C display threw sensor data across the terrain in a red emergency mask. It was worse than he’d feared.
“Three-six to Fox Three,” Huber said in a tone from which previous crises had burned all emotion. “Hostile hovertanks have gotten around us to the south. Fox Three-three—” Sergeant Jellicoe in Floosie “—leads on the new course at nine-seven degrees true. Three-six out. Break—”
His voice caught. He thought for a moment that he was going to vomit over the inside of his faceshield, but the spasm passed. There’d been too much; too much stress and pain and stench, even for a veteran.
“—Padova, throttle back so that we stay on the crest after the rest are clear. We may need the sensor range.”
The Solace commander had reacted fast by sending part of the Yeomanry around the Slammers’ left flank at the same time as the mechanized company circled their right. Huber’d held F-3 too long as he waited for supports that never came, but there was still a chance. The crews of the hovertanks wouldn’t be in a hurry to come to close quarters with the cars that had bloodied their vanguard so badly at the first shock.
Fencing Master growled onto the ridge line. The rise would separate the combat cars from the units th
ey’d already engaged, though the tanks approaching from the south were in the same shallow valley. The forest was somewhat of a shield for F-3, maybe enough of one.
Learoyd was on the forward gun now, swaying as though the grips were all that kept him upright. Deseau scanned the trees to the right, the direction the tanks would come from. Undergrowth was sparse here, but the treeboles allowed only occasional glimpses of anything as much as a hundred meters away.
F-3 was in line with the flanks echeloned back. The four cars in the center were across the ridge and proceeding downslope, but Jellicoe had slowed Floosie also. The additional ten seconds of sensor data hadn’t brought any new surprises, so Huber said, “Padova, goose it and—”
The clang of a slug penetrating iridium echoed through the forest. The icon for Fox Three-three went cross-hatched and stopped moving across the holographic terrain of the C&C display.
“Padova, get us to Floosie soonest!” Huber shouted. “Break! Fox Three, follow the plotted course. Three-one, you’re in charge till I rejoin with the crew of Three-five! Three-six out!”
Huber hadn’t thought, hadn’t had time to think, but he knew as Padova jerked Fencing Master hard left that instinct had led him to the right decision. Though two other combat cars were nearer Floosie than Fencing Master was, they’d have to reverse and climb the slope to reach the disabled vehicle. Gravity was more of a handicap than an extra hundred meters on level ground when you were riding a thirty-tonne mass.
Sergeant Nagano—Fox Three-one—was a few months junior in grade to Three-seven’s Sergeant Mullion, but Nagano’d been in F-3 when Huber took command a year ago while Mullion had been posted into the platoon only a few days before. Mullion might turn out to be a real crackerjack, and if so Huber would apologize to him at a suitable time. Right now there was enough else going wrong that Huber wasn’t about to trust his troopers to an unknown quantity besides.
Fencing Master wove between the trunks of massive trees. Learoyd slid the fingers of his left hand under his helmet to rub his scalp and forehead, but his right never left the grip of his tribarrel. He seemed to be back to normal now, or anyway what passed as normal for a trooper in the middle of a firefight.
Chatter filled the platoon push, but none of it came from Jellicoe and her crew. Huber tuned out the empty noise—anybody was likely to babble in the stress of a battle, no matter how well-trained and experienced they might be—and concentrated on what wasn’t there.
The icon for Three-three continued to pulse sullenly. Huber imported a remote image from Jellicoe’s gunsight to the corner of his faceshield. He got only a motionless view of treetops, but at least that was better than the black emptiness of an open channel.
“There’s Floosie!” Learoyd said. “El-Tee, they been hit from your side!”
Floosie was tilted against the west side of a huge tree, spun there by the first of the two rounds which’d hit her. The slug had struck the back of the fighting compartment and penetrated cleanly, angling slightly left to right and exiting above the driver’s hatch.
Floosie’d stalled at the impact. The second shot had slammed into the plenum chamber before the driver could restart his vehicle. That wasn’t his fault: the combined shock of the slug and collision with a three-meter-thick treebole was more anybody could’ve shrugged off instantly, even protected by the automatic restraint system of the driver’s compartment. The follow-up round had put paid to Floosie: there was a gaping hole in the skirts and at least half the fan nacelles would’ve been damaged or destroyed.
The tank that had knocked out the combat car was sited on the high ground a kilometer to the west. The hostile gunner had been lucky to get a sight line through the trees, but he’d been bloody good to react to the unexpected target and then to punch out a second round to finish the job. With so many shots ripping through the forest, one of them was bound to connect with something. . . .
“Padova, get us—” Huber said, but his driver was already slewing Fencing Master to the right, putting the tree and the bulk of the disabled car between them and the Solace gunner. The tank might’ve moved forward after it fired; but its commander just might have decided that he was better off where he was than he’d be if he came to close quarters with the Slammers’ tribarrels.
Deseau braced himself against the coaming beside Huber, cursing a blue streak. He’d grabbed Learoyd’s backup 1-cm sub-machine gun from its sling on a tie-down beside the right tribarrel. It wasn’t much of a weapon to threaten tanks with, but at least Deseau could point it toward the probable dangers.
Fencing Master slewed around the tree and grounded hard, its port quarter almost in contact with Floosie’s damaged bow skirt. The ragged exit hole was bigger than an access port.
Jellicoe’s driver climbed out of his hatch. He’d lost his helmet and his mouth hung open. A bitter haze of burned insulation lay over the fighting compartment, but as Fencing Master stopped, Huber saw a hand reach up to grip the coaming: Sergeant Jellicoe was still alive, if only just.
“Get aboard!” Huber screamed to the driver. As he spoke, he lifted his right foot to the top of Fencing Master’s armor and leaped into the disabled car. If anybody’d asked him a moment before, he’d have said he was so exhausted he had trouble just breathing. Deseau, continuing to curse, took over the left wing gun.
Floosie’s fighting compartment was an abattoir. The guns that hit her fired frangible shot that broke into a hypersonic spray on the other side of the penetration. Jellicoe had been manning the left wing gun and out of the direct blast, but the sleet of heavy-metal granules had splashed the thighs and torsos of her crewmen across the interior of the armor. Huber’s boots slipped when they hit the floor.
He fell with a dizzying shock. He was up again in a moment, but his right side was numb.
He lifted Sergeant Jellicoe. She was a stocky woman, still wearing the body armor that’d saved her life. Huber didn’t try to strip the ceramic clamshell off her now because he wasn’t sure his fingers could manipulate the catches. He stepped back and bent, throwing Jellicoe’s torso over his shoulders, then stumbled forward.
Learoyd and Deseau fired past Huber to either side; his faceshield blacked out the vivid cyan of their bolts. Via! there was no way in hell he was going to get aboard Fencing Master. He couldn’t carry Jellicoe and he sure couldn’t throw her into—
“Gotcha, El-Tee!” Frenchie said, bracing his left hand on the tribarrel’s receiver as he prepared to cross to help. “We’re golden!”
Huber didn’t hear the shot that struck Floosie’s bow slope, but he felt the car buck upward in the middle of a white flash.
Then he felt nothing. Nothing at all.
. . . he should be coming around very shortly . . . some part of the cosmos said to some other part of the cosmos.
Awareness—not consciousness, not yet—returned with the awkward jerkiness of a butterfly opening its wings as it poises on the edge of its cocoon. My name is Arne Huber. I’m—
Huber’s eyes opened. He saw three faces, anxious despite their hard features. Then the pain hit him and he blacked out.
He regained consciousness. The world was white, pulsing, and oven-hot—but he was alert, waiting for his vision to steady. He knew from experience that he hadn’t been out long this time, but how long he’d been here, in the main infirmary at Base Alpha . . . He must’ve been hurt bad.
“How’s Jellicoe?” he said. Huber’d heard rusty hinges with better tone than he had now, but he got the words out. “How’s my platoon sergeant?”
The technician adjusted his controls, his attention on the display of his medical computer. He nodded in self-satisfaction. Huber felt a quivering numbness in all his nerve endings.
The other men in the room were Major Danny Pritchard and— Blood and Martyrs—Colonel Hammer himself.
“She didn’t make it,” Hammer said flatly. “If you hadn’t had her over your back, you wouldn’t have made it either. The shot that hit Three-three’s bow slope splashed upward. T
he good part of it is that the impact pretty well threw you aboard your own car. Your people were able to bug out after the rest of the platoon with no further casualties.”
“It was quick for her,” said Major Pritchard. He smiled wryly. “This time that’s the truth.”
You always told civilian dependents that their trooper’s death had been quick, even if you knew she’d been screaming in agony, unable to open a jammed hatch as her vehicle burned. You didn’t lie to other troopers, though, because it was a waste of breath.
Huber nodded. Pain washed over him; he closed his eyes. The technician muttered and made adjustments. Huber felt the pain vanish as though a series of switches were being tripped in sequence.
The Slammers used pain drugs only as first aid. Once a trooper was removed to a central facility, direct neural stimulation provided analgesis without the negative side effects of chemicals. The Medicomp had kept Huber unconscious while he healed, exercising his muscles group by group to prevent atrophy and bed sores. He’d been awakened only when he should be able to walk on his own. The technician was smoothing out the vestiges of pain while Huber lay in a cocoon of induced inputs.
Huber opened his eyes. His brain was still collecting itself; direct neural stimulation tended to separate memory into discrete facets which reintegrated jarringly as consciousness returned. Part of Arne Huber understood it was remarkable that the Regiment’s commander and deputy commander stood beside his pallet, but everything was new and remarkable to him now.
“How long’s it been?” he said aloud, marvelling at the sound of his voice. “How long’ve I been out?”