On the tarmac of the airport, Jim Slater and Paul Green and a dozen other pilots checked out their planes one final time, once more went over flight plans and looked over their personal arms and equipment. They knew this was not to be an air war. Although their prop-driven planes were armed, they were not fighter planes. They were cargo and spotter planes.
Ben did have three old PUFFs, of the Vietnam era, each plane filled with electronically fired modern-day Gatlin guns. Each PUFF was capable of killing anything and everything in an area the size of a football field. But they were slow planes, and very susceptible to attack from ground-to-air missiles. One infantryman, armed with a Dragon, an XM47 guided missile, could bring down a PUFF.
Suddenly, as if on silent cue, the area quieted down. Engines idled quietly, conversation ceased as dawn began gently touching the east, gray fingers slowly opening from a dark fist to cast silver pockets of new light over the land, bringing another day to this part of the ravaged world.
Ben spoke into a walkie-talkie. “Spotter planes up. Go, boys.”
Moments later, the planes were airborne, their running lights blinking in the silver gray of early dawn.
“Dan?” Ben spoke into the walkie-talkie.
“Here, sir,” Colonel Gray called in from miles up the road.
“Scouts out,” Ben said quietly.
Miles north, with Col. Dan Gray in the lead Jeep, the scouts moved out.
“Are we in contact with the teams of LRRPs?” Ben asked.
“Yes, sir,” a young woman replied. “They are on the south side of Interstate 70, in place, waiting for your order to cross.”
“Send them across,” Ben ordered. “Have them link up with Gray’s scouts already in the area.”
“Yes, sir.” She spoke to a radio operator and a state and a half straight north, teams of Long Range Recon Patrol moved out on their lonely, dangerous and dirty job. They would be the eyes and the ears of Gen. Ben Raines.
Ben was handed a steaming mug of coffee. He sipped the hot, strong brew, mostly chicory, and walked the long lines of men and women and machines of war. He knew them all, faces if not names.
“How you doing this morning, Hector?” he asked Colonel Ramos, the C.O. of the third brigade of Raines’s Rebels.
“Ready, sir,” came the reply from the swarthy Hector.
“Viv raise much hell about being left behind?”
“A ’sangre y fuego.”
“And that means?”
“Fire and sword, Ben.”
“But wasn’t making up fun?” Ben grinned.
The Spaniard rolled his dark eyes and said, “Si – por cierto!”
Ben laughed and punched his friend lightly on the shoulder.
Ben walked on up the line. He came to a stunned and silent halt at a familiar figure.
The two men stood for a full minute, glaring at each other.
Ben shook his head and said, “Lamar, you are just too damned old for this trip.”
Lamar Chase, ex-navy doctor, was in his seventy-first year. Ben stood for a moment, looking at his friend, remembering the first time he laid eyes on the man.
He had been traveling alone, seeing what remained of the nation, talking to the survivors – those that would talk to him. Many ran in fear upon sighting him. He had driven into Colorado, the malamute, Juno, by his side in the cab of the pickup. Ben looked at the ruins of Denver, the sight of the once-beautiful city almost making him sick.
“Damn shame, isn’t it?” came a voice from behind Ben.
Ben spun, the 9mm pistol in his hand. Juno had been off taking a pee.
“Whoa!” The man had held out empty hands. “I’m friendly, boy.”
The man wore a pistol on his hip, but it was covered with the leather of a military-type holster. USN on the side of the flap.
Ben holstered his 9mm. “Navy?”
“For twenty-four years. Captain when the war broke out. Chase is my name, Lamar Chase.”
The men shook hands. “Ben Raines. What happened here in Denver?”
“Enemy saboteurs hit the base and hit it hard. For some reason, spite probably, they also placed firebombs in the city, in very strategic locations. Gas mains blew. The winds were just right. And Denver is no more. I was home on leave at that time. Took my wife up the mountains and sat it out.”
“I used to have a lot of fun in Denver. I was . . . I took some training up at Camp Hale.”
Chase smiled. “Ex-Hell-Hound, Ben?”
“That unit never existed, Captain – you know that.”
“Shit!”
Both men laughed. Ben took a closer look at the flap on Chase’s holster. USNMC. “You a doctor?”
“Yes. You look like the survivor type, Ben. Let’s sit and talk.”
The men talked for several hours.
“What do you think about our president, Ben?”
“I used to fuck his wife.”
Doctor Chase laughed so hard tears rolled from his eyes. “Beautiful,” he finally said. “I needed a good laugh. Come on home with me, Ben Raines – meet my wife and eat a home-cooked meal. I’ve got something to discuss with you, if you’re the Ben Raines I think you are.”
He was, and the doctor’s ideas were very nearly the same as Ben’s.
The men had agreed that the concept of Tri-States could work. And it did work for more than a decade.
“I’d like to see you try to stop me from running my combat hospital, Raines.” The old doctor stuck out his chin.
“Look, Lamar, be reasonable. Can’t I at least appeal to your common sense?”
“If I had any common sense, you crazy gun-soldier, would I be a part of anything you planned? Huh? Got you there, Raines.”
“Old goat!”
The troops stood back and listened in silence. They had heard it all many times from the general and the doctor.
“You should talk, President-General,” he said sarcastically. “I’m beginning to think you plan on repopulating the world single-handedly Why don’t you try keeping it in your pants every now and then? Now go tend to your business while I give my doctors and corpsmen some last-minute instructions on how to patch up people.”
“Damned hard-headed old crustacean,” Ben fired back at him.
“Oh, butt out, Raines.”
“That should be corpspersons,” Gale spoke from the silvery background.
“Ye gods!” Chase roared. “Is she coming along? Raines, can’t you control that woman?”
“You’re a male chauvinist pig, Lamar Chase,” Gale said with a smile.
“Damn right I am, sweetie. And proud of it.” Lamar stalked off, roaring and bellowing for his doctors and corpsmen to get off the dime and get their asses to their assigned places in this goddamned circus parade.
Ben took Gale’s hand and together they walked on up the line.
Ben spoke to his Rebels: a word, a greeting, a sentence, a smile. He was very much aware of the fact that every man and woman present would follow him into hell, and he loved them all for that.
He wondered again – as he had many times since he had made up his mind to commit his people – how many would die because of and for him?
He pushed that from his mind. As far away as he could.
“Ike,” Ben stopped and spoke to his long-time friend and buddy.
“Ben.”
Ben looked over Ike’s brigade. He spotted Jerre and her husband, Matt. He smiled and nodded at them and they returned the silent greeting. Ben always wondered what went on in Matt’s head, the young man knowing the children he was raising had been fathered by Ben.
He swung his gaze and spotted his daughter, Tina. A tall young man stood beside her. He smiled at them.
He looked again at Ike and noticed the gray in his friend’s close-cropped hair.
And the thought came to him: We are not young. Do we have the years left us to see this war-torn nation rise from the ashes?
I hope so.
“Kick-ass time, Ben?” Ike ask
ed with a gin.
The Medal of Honor winner was spoiling for a fight.
“You ready, sailor?” Ben returned the grin.
“Cast off, mate.”
“Then get them mounted up and moved out, Ike,” Ben spoke the words that would again shake the nation into warfare. “I’ll see you in a few days.”
“Let’s go!” Ike shouted. “Go – go – go!”
Juan’s Solis’s troops had rolled out of Arizona thirty-six hours before Ben’s column headed north. Al Malden and Mark Terry moved their people in conjunction with Solis. Almost seven thousand fighting men and women were rolling slowly but steadily toward the most hideous threat to humankind since Hitler’s nightmarish dreams of a master race.
And all knew that madman’s ravings could not, must not, be allowed to again rear its ugly head.
Juan knew it. Al and Mark knew it. Ben knew it. All the troops knew it. Troops of every race and nationality: blacks, whites, Hispanics, Jews, Orientals, Indians, both East and West Indians. If this nation was ever to climb out of the ashes of war and destruction and disease and hunger and lack of faith and hope, it would have to be done without bigotry adding to the seemingly insurmountable task facing those who believe in democracy over slavery, justice over lynch mobs, fairness over prejudice.
This violent confrontation just had to be. The participants had no choice in the matter.
This might very well be their only chance.
The world’s last chance.
ELEVEN
The convoys had to move slowly, for the big tanks had a top speed of only thirty mph, and it was essential that the tanks be a part of any assault, for the M60A2 tank not only had a 152mm gun launcher, but also carried thirteen Shillelagh missiles, a .50-caliber commander’s machine gun, and coaxially mounted 7.62-caliber machine guns. It was fifty-seven tons of awesomeness, twelve feet wide, almost eleven feet high, and twenty-four feet long. Ben had thirty M60A2 tanks. Ten in each brigade.
The M60A1 battle tank was just slightly lighter, weighing fifty-two-and-a-half tons, carrying a 105mm cannon, plus .50-caliber and 7.62-caliber machine guns. Ben had thirty of them. Ten per brigade.
The M48A3 main battle tank carried the same type of machine guns, but with a 90mm cannon. It was a half ton lighter than the M60A1, but could fire ten rounds a minute from its cannon, and was more maneuverable. Ben also had thirty of them. Ten in each column.
The scant intelligence reports Ben had received had indicated the IPF had no tanks, but did have rolling howitzers and mortars.
Ben smiled a secret smile as he drove in his pickup, Gale sitting by his side. Occasionally she would rest her hand on his thigh. He knew he had the IPF outgunned with his M109A1 155mm self-propelled howitzers. The big bastards, with a crew of six, could sit back and lob shells a distance of eighteen thousand meters, which was close to eight miles. Nothing the IPF had could get close to them. Ben had twelve of them. Four per brigade.
Ninety tanks, twelve self-propelled howitzers. Ben had 320 people tied up in armor alone. He had 250 people as drivers and relief drivers. That left him with just over 2500 ground combat troops.
Gale glanced at him, taking note of the secret smile on his lips. She matched it until curiosity got the best of her.
“What are you smiling about, Ben?”
He shook his head. “I shouldn’t be smiling. I was thinking that we have the IPF outgunned. But they have us outnumbered.”
“Are we going to win, Ben?”
“No way for me to answer that, Gale.”
“Humor me.”
“The odds are not good,” Ben told it like it was. “I won’t lie to you about that.”
“Where is that famous Raines confidence?” she asked. “That chutzpa that carried you all the way from trashy book writer to president?”
Ben fixed her with a jaundiced look. “Trashy book writer?”
“Well?”
“Oh, I still have confidence, Gale. And I won’t harp on this subject, but I do wish you had stayed at home.”
“I have a personal stake in this, Ben.”
“Oh?” Ben glanced at her from out of the corner of his eye.
“Yeah. I’m a Jew.”
“Really? I hadn’t noticed.”
She called him a perfectly filthy name.
If they could make 175 miles per day, they were doing well, even though the tank commanders were pushing the behemoth machines at max speed. Ben’s column spent the first night on the road at the junction of Highways 67 and 63, in a small town in Arkansas called Hoxie. It was yet another lifeless town, the bones of the dead scattered by wind and animals, bleached ghostly white by the past summer’s sun. No one among the Rebels paid much attention to the bones. It was a sight they had long grown accustomed to seeing.
But the smaller skeletons still bothered most of the men and women. They would not speak of that emotion, but they would avert their eyes and swallow hard, perhaps thinking of their own lost children, or of their brothers or sisters.
That first night, when the troops had been fed and bedded down, the guards posted, Ben rolled a cigarette – one of the few he allowed himself daily – then slipped into the blankets beside Gale. She turned, coming into his arms.
“Hey, Ben?” she softly whispered.
They were sleeping outside, under a sky that seemed alive with dead worlds, millions of miles away, a black velvet background softening the luster, making the diamond glow seem much more intimate, making the two seem much more alone.
“Yes, Ms. Roth?”
“I’m glad it was you that came along, Ben – up in Missouri, I mean.”
“Aren’t you afraid people will snicker and point at us?” he kidded her. It was a game they sometimes played. “Maybe they’ll think you’re my daughter. Or maybe they’ll think you’re a wanton woman. Or maybe that I’m a dirty old man.”
“The latter I’ll agree with. Come on, Ben. Don’t joke – I’m serious.”
“OK. No more jokes.”
“I’ve been thinking about what you said today. We’re in trouble, aren’t we? I mean ... what is left of the country?”
“Yes.”
“About those odds you mentioned.”
“They aren’t good, Gale. But I can’t be certain of that because I can’t get accurate intelligence readings out of the areas the IPF control. Maybe the LRRPs will report back some good news.”
“Yeah, maybe. I hate to be a harbinger of doom, but have you thought about what might happen if you – we – can’t whip these people?”
“Plenty of thought. North Georgia, for one. That area looks good.”
“North Georgia? You got a thing about the South, don’t you? Is the Klan strong there?” There was open skepticism in her voice.
Ben chuckled. “You remind me of a girl I knew years ago. She – ”
“Was she Jewish?” Gale interrupted.
“Yes.”
“I don’t want to hear about her.”
“We were friends, Gale, not lovers.”
“You believe if you painted wings on a pig it would fly?”
“What kind of a stupid question is that?”
“About as stupid as you telling me you were friends with a woman. Raines, you have never been just friends with any woman you thought you could screw.”
“I think I’ll go to sleep on that.”
She rudely poked him in the ribs with a finger. “So tell me about her.”
“I thought you didn’t want to hear.”
“I changed my mind already.”
“She wouldn’t visit the South because she thought she would find blazing crosses in every soybean and cotton field.”
Gale waited. “Is that it? Is that all? You got me all worked up for that?”
“I thought it amusing.”
“You would. Did she?”
“Did she what?”
“Visit the damn South?”
“How the hell do I know? I haven’t seen her in years.”
> Gale was silent for a moment. “Was she pretty?”
“Positively the most beautiful woman I have ever met.”
“Raines . . .”
“You were asking, I believe, about north Georgia.”
“So proceed.” Definitely a touch of irritation.
“I thought we might settle there, win or lose. Right under the Chattahoochee National Forest. I’ve checked it out. It would be very difficult for anyone to dislodge a sizable force from that area. I’ve sent a team into that country; they’re in there now, nosing around.”
She stirred in his arms. “I’ll forgive you for making out with that girl.”
“I never made – ”
“Then you don’t think we have much chance of beating these . . . the IPF?”
Ben sighed. “If all the troops we are committing, Gale – if they all were my people, trained by me, yes, we would have a chance.”
“Would you please explain that?”
“I’m not putting down Juan’s people, or Al’s people – I don’t want you to think that at all. They are all good people, I’m sure of that. But they aren’t professional fighters. A great many of the people in my command are combat veterans, Gale Every person in my command is highly trained and disciplined. They are probably the best trained people now under one command – anywhere in the world. With the possible exception of Striganov’s IPF.
“But the problem, Gale, is not with the courage or the loyalty of the troops under Juan or Al. That isn’t it at all. They just aren’t trained. And if something totally unexpected or unpredictable is thrown at them, I don’t know how they’re going to react. Neither Al nor Mark nor Juan ever pulled any military time. They are going to throw their people into this without any of them having any experience in tactics or logistics.” Ben sighed heavily. “Maybe we can pull it off, Gale. I just don’t know.”
She snuggled closer to him. “Please hold me, Ben,” she whispered.
“My pleasure.”
Long moments passed before Gale asked, “What was her name, Ben?”
Anarchy in the Ashes Page 16