Conquistador

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Conquistador Page 49

by S. M. Stirling


  The Bothas led, father and son; this land was part of the Versfeld domain, only ten miles or so from their farm, and they’d both hunted through it for years. The party went east for a good long while, then began trending a little south, keeping the mountains parallel to their course on their left; the Dipper blazed above them, and the Pole Star was plain enough. The land was pretty well flat, with an occasional hill rearing out of the plain; for a while the vegetation died down to sagebrush and dry grass with an occasional scrubby tree. He was a little startled when one of the trees raised its head and looked at them….

  A dry rustling sound stopped; he hadn’t noticed it until then. That had been something huge cropping at the top of an oak, and ripping the leaves loose with a long prehensile tongue. It reared up to its full eighteen feet of height as they approached, its two knobby horns and long camel-like head clear against the stars, then turned and paced away, both long gangly legs on either side moving in unison. It looked slow even after it had broken into a clumsy gallop, but he estimated that it was moving at nearly thirty miles an hour.

  Adrienne gave a low gurgling chuckle. “There’s something intrinsically funny about a giraffe,” she said. “Unless it kicks you. In a way, it’s a pity this land isn’t slated as Commission reserve.”

  “I admit, it looks a lot better than FirstSide LA,” Tom said. “Smells better, too. It would be a shame to see it go the same way.”

  “Oh, we’re never going to let it get like that,” she said. “Just farms and ranches and small towns, with a couple of medium-sized cities. No long-distance aqueducts, and strict limits on wells—one thing the domain system was designed to do was make it impossible for cities to reach out and suck other regions dry. But it’ll be a lot tamer than it is now.”

  It couldn’t be much wilder, Tom thought. Christ, what a mix-up—Wild West and wild Serengeti!

  They came to a dirt road a couple of miles inland, rutted clay scattered with gravel on a low embankment, flanked by ditches and tall posts carrying wires.

  Adrienne pointed southward along the dirt road. “That’s Highway One,” she said. “It’s paved from San Diego to the oil wells and refinery at Long Beach; then it heads north, inland for a way, up to San Luis Obispo and Paso Robles. In theory you could drive all the way from San Diego to the geyser country north of Napa—but a lot of it’s rough, not easily motorable like this.”

  “It’s all what you’re used to,” Tom said gravely. And I’ve seen better roads than this in Afghanistan, for God’s sake.

  After that the vegetation grew thicker again; for a couple of miles they traveled single-file through stands of castor-bean plant mixed with wild black mustard in a tangle that that ranged from six feet in height to ten; small yellow flowers were still blooming at the end of the mustard’s short branches. After the first few hundred yards it was like riding through neck-deep water that occasionally closed over his head—although water wouldn’t make you sneeze, which the pollen from the mustard did—or between rustling walls along a laneway barely wide enough for a horse and rider.

  “Careful, big Tom,” Simmons said on his way back to check on the mules.

  “Here be tigers?” he replied.

  Adrienne answered for him: “The place is lousy with them. Also grizzly bears and lions. Cape buffalo and American bison, and the odd rhino too; and up ahead”—she pointed southeast—“is the Winkpar.”

  “Which means?”

  “The Indian word was pwinukipar, or something like that. It means ‘many waters’ or ‘big swamp.’ Hippos. Elephants. Crocs.”

  “Right where Las Cienegas was, right?”

  Before that became a main Los Angeles highway, it had been what its Spanish name meant—“swamps.”

  “Right. But it’s not just one big block—there are little sloughs and seepage springs all over the country between the river and the Santa Monicas. Excuse me, between the river and the Krugersberg.”

  “Well, that adds a certain charm to a ride in the night,” Tom said, and they smiled at each other in the rustling dimness.

  And oddly enough, it’s true, he thought, feeling himself warmed. Although if I’m going to be charged by a rhino, better while riding a Hummer than a horse.

  They moved on through the night, stopping every hour or so for ten minutes’ rest and switching horses every two. He used the intervals to stretch, grunting a little as he forced head to knee. Mosquitoes grew more common as they skirted the huge swamp to their south; it made him glad he’d had the malaria cellular vaccine just before he left the army. The marshes covered scores of square miles, even toward the end of the summer drought—and so did groves of trees on their edges, sycamores and big cottonwoods and willows mostly, with oaks and California walnut; the shade grew dense enough that everyone put their night-sight goggles back on. They were riding through an open gallery forest most of the time; the problem was that there were patches and outliers of the marsh, where streams ran downhill from the Santa Monicas or underground rock ledges forced the already-high water table to the surface. Those produced jungle, an impenetrable lacework of creepers and California rose. Sometimes you couldn’t go around.

  He dismounted at a hand gesture and unlimbered the machete from his saddle. “Now this takes me back,” he said, as he took his turn.

  The blade was a slightly flared rectangle of good steel, heavy and sharp; he waded in, reminding himself that they needed a path wide enough for horses, not just men. Brushwood and branches and thorny vines fell with a ssss-chunk! as he struck with blows that might have been timed by metronome, flicking or kicking the cut stems aside when he had to. The ground turned muddy under his feet, but they didn’t come to an actual river, just a laneway of lower growth that carried the overflow of the winter storms down from the mountains. Sweat ran down his face and flanks and back as he breathed deeply with the exertion, an agreeable enough sensation—which wasn’t something he’d ever thought he’d say about breathing in the LA basin! Back FirstSide, he’d be choking on the air….

  Henry Villers came up to spell him. “Nice job,” he said. “I thought you did your fighting in dry places, Warden Tom.”

  “Mostly—Euphrates to Hindu Kush, with excursions north. But my battalion got sent to the Philippines for a while during the war—Abu Sayyef tried a revival. Jungle work.”

  “What happened?”

  Tom grimaced. “Some of us died. All of them died… not a happy time. At least it isn’t raining here, and there aren’t many civilians to get caught in the cross fire.”

  “I was a dry-area fighter myself,” the black man said; he took over, competently enough, if without the machine accuracy and strength of the ex-Ranger.

  “Kuwait?”

  “Gulf War One, right,” Villers said. “Marines—we did the ‘hey diddle diddle, straight up the middle’ part while you army pukes played at being Rommel’s Desert Rats.”

  “Ah… I think Rommel was the Desert Fox and fought the Desert Rats,” he said, hesitating until Villers turned and grinned at him over his shoulder.

  “Man, you fell for that one! I hung out with some Brits during the buildup; they still have that dumb-ass rodent painted on their tanks.”

  Tom nodded acknowledgment at the hit. “What was your MOS, if you don’t mind me asking?”

  “Hey, every marine’s a rifleman—even the women. Seriously, it was infantry—I carried the squad’s Minimi,” Villers said; that meant he’d been a machine gunner. “Anyway, it wasn’t much of a war. Never saw anyone so anxious to surrender as those Homers. Taking care of them slowed us down worse than fighting would have.”

  “Best kind of war,” Tom said sincerely. “Even better if you’re piloting a Predator through a satellite uplink from Florida.”

  “Right on, brother,” Villers said, panting, dropping back to let Schalk Botha replace him at the front. “Christ, I’m thirty-eight and I feel every year of it. Should have spent more time in the hills hunting deer this spring.”

  All the men
took turns at the clearing, until they were up and through the slough and into more of the cottonwood forest.

  “We’ll camp here,” Botha said. “We’ll need firewood—”

  “And I’ll help put up the tents,” Henry Villers said smoothly, with a toothy smile.

  Tom filled in the unspoken codicil and smiled to himself: Draw your own water, Mr. Boer, and hew your own wood.

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  Southern California

  July 2009

  The Commonwealth of New Virginia

  My words are tied in one

  With the great mountains,

  With the great rocks,

  With the great trees,

  In one with my body

  And my heart.

  Do you all help me

  With your spirit power,

  And you, day!

  And you, night!

  All of you see me—one with this world!

  Kolomusnim finished his chant to the setting sun, lowered his arms and dropped the tuft of burning grass he’d been holding and ground it out under one callused heel; a waft of acrid smoke drifted past them. Adrienne stopped her running sotto voce translation an instant later, and Kolo trotted off toward the Glendale Narrows.

  They were camped on the low terrace that had been the original site of El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles, not far from the Los Angeles River itself; there was still water in the stream even in July this far north. The party had pitched its tents amid a grove of walnuts and oaks, a place of dappled shade with plenty of grass for the hobbled animals; it gave them shelter, but they had only to walk a quarter mile north to be in open grassland with a view that stretched nearly to the sea. They’d waited here all day, meaning to make the passage through the pass and into the San Fernando after dark, and after the Indian tracker had scouted it. There was a coffeepot at the edge of the fire, and an iron kettle with a mix of beans and bits of dried meat bubbling in it.

  Good to have him check before we go through, Tom thought.

  Kolo came back to the fire two hours later; they were all sitting on the ground around it, using their saddles as seats or backrests, and he could feel the leather pushing into the small of his back. The expedition’s supplies didn’t run to camp chairs; they were mostly food in the form of hardtack, beans, jerky and dried fruit, three small camouflage-patterned dome tents with collapsible titanium-strut frames, and their weapons and other gear.

  “Ten men,” the Indian said abruptly, spooning food onto a plate and pouring coffee into a tin cup. “Six who watch, four who rest.”

  Kolo ate, then placed the map of the pass through the Glendale Narrows and into the San Fernando Valley on the ground, with stones to weight the corners. He drew the big knife at his belt to use as a pointer. Tom leaned closer, conscious of the hard, dry smell of the man, like an ox that had been sweating in the sun.

  There was a good reason that the region was called narrow; the hills pinched close, only a few hundred yards apart at their narrowest point, and most of the bed was the Los Angeles River. It was the only eastern exit to the valley; freeways used it back FirstSide, and it was a rough track here.

  The Indian went on, with Simmons lending a hand with vocabulary; sometimes Kolo would drop into his own language, and the Scout translated.

  “Ten men. They camp beyond the narrows—a mile—make like it’s a hunting camp, some horses, tents. But always two-threes—”

  “That’s two groups of three,” Simmons said.

  “—on hills above narrows. With guns, guns like Long Shot carries—”

  “Telescopic sights,” Simmons put in, and Kolo grunted affirmatively.

  “And they are hidden. Not badly, for white men; well enough to fool other white men. Change one-three every four, five hours.”

  “What did they look like?” Botha put in.

  Kolo described them in exhaustive detail; he couldn’t read or write, but he seemed to have what amounted to a photographic memory for plants and animals, including people. Botha listened, then shook his head.

  “Andries Rhoodie. Ach, cis, Andries, I had hoped you were not such a fool, but I didn’t hope too much. The others… Konrad de Buys, Wilhelm Gebhard , Benny Lang, and Ernie Graaf; I can’t place any more.”

  “You know them?” Adrienne asked softly.

  “They’re among those I would have expected to be in on this, miss,” Botha said, his square face clenched in anger or pain.

  “Do you think your Prime would know?” she said.

  “Nie. Not officially. He would wait, and listen, and keep silent, and then move only when he saw which way the cat would jump,” Botha said, with a shrug of his massive shoulders. “That’s Slim Hendrick for you.”

  Tom spoke: “How many of your, ah, former countrymen would be in on this? In enough to fight, that is.”

  Botha shrugged again. “Hard to say. It’s… not easy, losing your country. Knowing you can never go back, never see the place you were born, swallowing defeat.”

  He rubbed a hand over his face, missing the look Kolomusnim shot him from under lowered brows. The Afrikaner went on:

  “And then here, it looks like there’s a chance to get our own back. Tempting. More than ten. Less than a hundred, I think.”

  Tom looked at the map again, and then took out a larger-scale one that showed the whole of the LA basin and its surrounding mountain ranges.

  “Offhand, I don’t think they’re waiting for us, specifically. Just for anyone who might be poking his nose into the Mohave without good reason, probably to report rather than kill.”

  “Or possibly report most, and kill if they see a couple of specific people—like me,” Adrienne said. “Either would be fatal, literally or metaphorically. And it means they must be getting ready to strike. They couldn’t keep this up for more than a month or two; people would start asking questions if they neglect their farms and shops for that long.”

  “Well, we could go back and try one of the other passes,” Tom said. “The Sepulveda over the Santa Monicas, or go east and take the Cajon over the San Gabriels.”

  Adrienne shook her head. “That would cost us days, and anyway, a hundred men are enough to guard most of the easy passes across the mountains. The difficult ones are dangerous themselves, for a party this size with horses and mules—and we need those supplies to get across the Mohave. It’s really quite good strategy, as long as they don’t have to do it very long.”

  Botha sighed regretfully. “Then we have to kill them. Quickly, quietly. Even then, when they don’t report in, there will be suspicion—the Collettas will know somebody went by, if not who.”

  Kolo spoke, and grinned; it was a slow, cruel expression, and the cut-a-circle-and-tug gesture he used on the top of his own head was unmistakable.

  “Not if it looks like Indians did it,” Simmons translated, wincing a bit. “And the Collettas and Batyushkovs have been stirring up the Mohave tribes, so it would look natural enough. Alarming, but not pointing to us.”

  Adrienne looked at Tom. “Suggestions?” she said. “You’re more experienced at this sort of operation than any of us.”

  Tom let out a long breath and looked at the map, calling up old habits. This isn’t a pleasant hunting trip, he told himself.

  “All right, their main weakness is that they’ve split up,” he said. “Six of them there in the pass, the rest a mile away at their base camp, sleeping or doing chores.” He thought a moment in silence. “When do they change their watchers? Do they have someone bring food?”

  His questions went on. Kolo answered; there was nearly a mutiny when young Schalk Botha was told to stay and help with the camp along with Sandra Margolin.

  He was still sputtering about being treated like a girl when his father’s hand cuffed him across the side of the head: “Shut up and do as you’re told, boy! Or I send you back to your mother!”

  Tom grinned a little. “You’re staying here because everything has to be ready to move quickly,” he said to the you
ng Afrikaner. “Once we’ve… accomplished the mission”—Killed ten men and created a lot of widows and orphans, he added silently to himself—“we’ll need to get through the narrows as quickly as possible. There isn’t much traffic, I understand, but that isn’t the same as none. We’ll need the horses and the pack-mules brought up, and fast.”

  The young man ran a hand over his sparse silky beard. “Ja. I understand. I’m to guard the woman.”

  Tom’s grin grew harder to control as he watched Sandra steam; Tully quieted her with a wink behind the young Afrikaner’s back. Adrienne rolled her eyes silently; he could hear her thought: What am I, chopped liver? One of the boys?

  “Everyone understand what they have to do?” he asked when he’d finished laying out the plan; they all nodded. Kolo looked at him with a degree of surprised respect, as if he hadn’t expected anything so competent.

  “Then let’s do it, people. Let’s go.”

  Just as described, Tom decided. Two sniper teams, a spare back in camp, and one extra man… Jesus, that must be a brutal schedule.

  Which meant that they were probably doing the same at the other passes, spreading themselves thin and working double shifts to keep the coverage as wide as possible. Two posts was real sparse coverage for an area this big.

  The pass ran east-west; Tom and the rest were high up on the southern flank. It was full dark, lit only by starlight with the moon not yet up. A breeze from the southwest was flowing up through the pass, drawn by the cooling of the air in the great valley beyond—the San Fernando got hotter in the daytime and more chilly at night than the coast lowlands. The wind smelled of dust, and dried herbs like an old-fashioned kitchen. Rocks ground into his belly as he looked downslope; there were real trees down there, before the river and its border of bulrushes and willows and giant tule reeds. Up here it was dense chaparral brush, cacti—he’d had several of the needles prick him in the dark—and yuccas, including Our Lord’s Candle, a ten-foot-tall type tipped by a flower that was probably pretty in daylight.

 

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