Duty, Honor, Planet: The Complete Trilogy

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Duty, Honor, Planet: The Complete Trilogy Page 83

by Rick Partlow

“Worse than that,” Gianeto said, “remember that those ramships were already equipped to survive multiple field intersects. What if this cruiser is rigged up the same way?”

  “She’ll recover before we do,” Minishimi deduced. “And unlike the ramships, she’ll have enough firepower to blow us apart.”

  “Could we launch a Shipbuster before the intersect?” Lee wondered. “Like we did with the ramships? Program it to hit right after we take out their field?”

  “We could get away with that before,” Gianeto explained, “because the ramships are basically unarmed. If this is an operational cruiser, it’ll have the defenses to take out a Shipbuster.” He hissed out a frustrated breath. “We’ve never had to plan on fighting our own ships, or anything remotely like them.”

  “We have the Sheridan,” Franks suggested. “If one of us did a field intersect, that would leave the enemy ship open to a strike from the other.”

  “The only problem there is what I mentioned before, Lieutenant,” Infante replied. “If that ship is rigged to recover quickly from a field collision, the other cruiser may not have time to attack before the enemy’s drive field is back up. And with the damage I expect from such a collision, we’ll have basically sacrificed one of our ships for nothing.”

  “Work on it, Commander Infante,” Minishimi directed. “Find me something. If you can’t, we’re going to have to put ourselves between her and Earth. She can’t launch on them without dropping her field, and she can’t do that if we’re sitting right there, waiting to take potshots at her.”

  “But Captain,” Franks said, “they still control the defenses…including the ground based lasers. If we drop field to fight the ship, they can shoot us down.”

  “Yes they can, Lieutenant,” she admitted, smiling sadly.

  “Oh.” Realization came into his eyes. “Yes, ma’am.” Franks shrugged. He’d known what he was getting into when he’d come aboard the Brad. “Between our loved homes and the war’s desolation,” he murmured.

  “What was that?” Minishimi asked, eyes narrowing as she tried to place the quote. “Is that from Homer?”

  “Sort of, ma’am,” he told her. “Just something I remembered from history class.”

  “If we win this fight, Lieutenant,” she told him, “you’ll be taught in those history classes.”

  “And if we lose,” Gianeto cracked, “the history classes will be taught in Russian.”

  Minishimi scowled at him, but it broke into a smile against her will.

  “Lt. Reno,” she said, turning to the Communications Officer, “signal the Sheridan to come into comms range and drop field. We won’t be able to do this alone.”

  Chapter Forty-Four

  As he knelt over the dead biomech, Ariel Shamir thanked whatever gods of war that might be listening that Fourcade and Hellene D’Annique had found it convenient to outfit their clone army with standard military 8mm rifles already in the supply pipeline. Otherwise, they all might have run out of ammo by now. He slapped a fresh magazine into the well of his carbine and stuffed the rest of the salvaged mags into the empty pouches on his tactical vest. Beside him in the dry creek bed, Roza did the same from another of the dozens of biomech corpses piled there, some in charred and bloody pieces.

  “Grab everything you can,” he called to the rest of the two platoons they were leading as they moved through the ditch, scavenging. “Look for grenades and heavy weapons!”

  Ari glanced up and down the creek bed and beyond it, where the surviving Cee Gee cadets, their training cadre and a few of the Special Ops troops were foraging through the dead for ammunition. A glow of burning vehicles suffused the air above them, while the ditch itself was cloaked in shadows and darkness, growing a pale green in the infrared filters in his helmet visor.

  “Ari,” he heard Colonel Stark’s voice in his earphones. “Hurry them up down there. Their vehicles are reforming and I think they’re getting ready to circle around and make another push for the bridge…or move off to find another crossing. We’re going to make sure it’s the former.”

  “Yes, ma’am,” he replied. “A ‘V’ centered on the bridge?”

  “More or less,” she agreed. “See if we can make a bit more use of natural cover this time, since we aren’t running for our lives at the moment.”

  “Got it, Colonel.” He expected to chuckle at the comment, but found he couldn’t. Too many of the Colonial Guard officer candidates that he himself had helped to train were lying dead on the bloody, smoking ground up there. Instead, he walked over to Roza, squeezing her arm and touching helmets. “I love you,” he told her. Through her visor, he could see her eyes glancing his way with a bit of worry.

  “I love you, too, kedves,” she said. “Is it bad?”

  “The enemy is swinging around the wreckage and trying to come back in and take this bridge,” he replied. “They’ll have to dismount and push us out of here before they can clear it.”

  “And there’ll be no more fire support,” she said with resignation in her voice.

  Ari didn’t answer: there was no need. Instead, he keyed his helmet radio, tuned to the company net. “Wrap it up, ladies and gentlemen,” he said. “The day’s not over yet.”

  Tom Crossman fought to control his breathing as he jogged the game trail that led over the gently rolling hills on the other side of the dry creek bed. He hadn’t slept more than an hour in days, his body’s resources were being tapped by the medical nanotech still repairing his wounds from within and he was buzzing on stimulants. His heart felt as if it were about to beat out of his chest and he seemed to be constantly on the verge of hyperventilating, but he pushed on, ignoring it all, ignoring the weight of the load he was carrying in his backpack and concentrating on trying to make sense of the input from the thermal and infrared lenses in his helmet in the pitch blackness.

  The trail was closed in by young trees but as it cleared the next hill, it opened out onto an old secondary road that exited off the main highway. The road was crumbling and overgrown, but it was wide and clear enough for even the big cargo haulers, much less the APCs, which could have gone cross-country at need. That was why Tom and his squad were there.

  “Where are their scouts, Colonel?” he radioed to Shannon Stark as he crouched in the trees beside the old road. He could hear Aaron Diehl slowly moving into place beside him and could see the rest of the squad’s avatars on his HUD as they took up positions on both sides of the road.

  “They’re heading your way, Tom,” she warned him. “Two APCs. You’ve got maybe two minutes.”

  “Roger that, ma’am.” He switched to Sgt. Diehl’s channel. “Sam, we have two enemy vehicles inbound, ETA two minutes. Take Manning and the last two missile launchers and stop them.”

  “Got it, boss,” Diehl said, sprinting across the road and slapping Manning on the arm. The two of them grabbed a pair of anti-armor launchers from the backpack of one of the other Special Ops troops then headed down the road toward the intersection.

  “Griffin!” Tom snapped at another of the newly-graduated operators. “Get over here and grab these charges from my backpack! We got ourselves a road to blow up!”

  Tanya Manning gripped the twin handles of the missile launcher tightly, trying very hard to keep her hands from shaking. She could see the two armored vehicles approaching now, their thermal signature dim but still visible through the trees lining the road, and she touched the launcher’s targeting control, seeing a red reticle appear in her helmet’s HUD. The reticle flashed yellow as the launcher detected the trees between it and its intended target, but she waited, knowing the APCs would clear the obstructions in a few seconds.

  Her finger was tightening slightly on the trigger when both armored vehicles stopped in the middle of the road four hundred meters away, their turbines mosquito whines in the distance. She froze, certain they’d been seen, watching the 25mm cannon on the upper turret of both APCs traversing back and forth and waiting for the inevitable flash of fire and the explosion of she
lls…

  What she got instead was the thump of the rear ramps on both vehicles opening and the faint clatter of armored boots as each APC disgorged a squad of a dozen of the biomech troopers.

  “We have dismounts from the scout vehicles,” Diehl’s calm pronouncement sounded in her helmet speakers. “We’re going to need some support up here.” He seemed so calm about it, as if this was something that happened every day. She felt awe when she heard him or Sgt. Crossman react that way; she was sure of her own courage, but nowhere near as sure of her unflappability.

  “I’m sending what we can spare,” Tom Crossman told him, a shrug in his voice. “Hold them off until we get these charges planted.”

  “Roger that, boss. Manning,” Diehl directed her, “come get this other launcher from me.”

  Without questioning it, she slung her own launcher and quickly high-crawled across the road to Sgt. Diehl’s position, taking the jagged pavement on the padded knees and elbows of her armor to minimize the noise. Reaching Diehl’s side, she rose to a crouch and accepted the proffered missile launcher from him.

  “Cut through the trees,” he instructed, “and get into a position where you have a clear shot at both those APCs. We’ll hold off the dismounts, but we need those vehicles gone.”

  “Got it, Sergeant,” she acknowledged, slinging the second launcher over her shoulder, then pulling her carbine loose against its chest straps. “I’ll take care of it.”

  She felt the strain in her quads as she pushed up the steep hill on that side of the road, weaving between the trees. Loamy soil shifted under her boots and she shifted her weight forward to keep from sliding back down the hill, trying to make as little noise as possible. She fervently hoped that the crew of the APC was focused on the road ahead, because if they opened up on her right now, she had no cover and no clear shot back at them.

  She hadn’t gone more than fifty meters through the woods, struggling to keep her balance on the steep hillside, when she heard gunfire erupt behind her. She risked a quick check on her HUD and saw six friendly icons on the road, engaging at least twenty of the enemy, who weren’t accommodating enough to provide IFF transponders to let her know where they were.

  She forced herself not to think about the danger her friends faced, concentrating instead on the square icons glowing a faint red on the thermal sensors in her helmet, still over 200 meters away. She’d intended to skirt the edge of the road and come out behind the vehicles, giving them less time to react after the first shot, but with the dismounted biomechs already engaging the Special Ops troops on the road…

  Dammit. The APCs were slowly rolling forward, moving up to support their squads. No choice now.

  Manning dashed straight down the hillside, grunting in pain as she bounced off one tree after another, using the impacts to keep herself upright despite the steep grade. Coming to the bottom, she took the last meter in a leap to the pavement, absorbing the landing on flexed knees and still having to slap a hand on the hard ground in front of her to keep from toppling over.

  Her head tilted up and she could see the two armored vehicles looming a hundred meters away, the muzzles of their cannons and assault guns seeming to be pointing directly at her. She let her carbine fall free of her grasp, allowing its sling to pull it tight against her chest armor as she unslung the first of the missile launchers, activating its targeting system even before she brought it up to her shoulder.

  The APC to her left was closer by about 50 meters, and she instinctively made it her first target, squeezing the trigger the second the reticle flashed red, then throwing the spent launcher aside and flattening on the ground. The missile hit before she was fully down and the concussion tossed her backwards, sending her tumbling along the broken pavement, her weapons and equipment jabbing into her painfully despite her armor, adding to the bruises she’d already collected and crushing the breath from her lungs. Heat washed over her as the APC was consumed in a fireball of hyperexplosives and she felt a chunk of debris smack painfully against her helmet, leaving her ears ringing, her vision filled with stars and her faceplate starred and cracked.

  Manning desperately forced her brain to work, forced her limbs to respond. She brought her knees beneath her and scrambled to her feet, running to the left to put the burning vehicle between her and the intact APC. She thought she heard the deep drumbeat of an assault gun opening up at her, but she didn’t dare turn to make sure; instead she kept running, pushing into a sprint that made her heart pound like a triphammer and her breath rasp in her throat.

  She had almost cleared the edge of the burning wreckage of the left-hand APC and reached cover when she felt something tug at the back of her right calf and she stumbled but refused to go down, not even bothering to look to see how badly she was hit: there just wasn’t time. Her calf was numb and her foot didn’t seem to want to work right so she dragged it and limped-ran, cutting closer to the flames of the burning hulk than she’d wanted to. Her armor was fire-resistant but the wash of raw heat that washed over her made her light-headed and stole the breath from her lungs.

  Tears filled her eyes and she blinked them away angrily, compartmentalizing the pain, shutting it away. There was one job left to do, then she could cry. She unslung the last missile launcher, tried to activate her helmet’s targeting system, but her HUD was down, damaged in the blast from the first APC.

  “Fuck it,” she snarled aloud to herself. “I’ll shove the damned thing up their ass.”

  She giggled a bit deliriously at the thought that her father would have been horrified to hear her use that sort of language. Captain Alfred Manning had been a pillar of moral rectitude, first in his class at the Republic Military Academy and the model officer and gentleman…right up until Republic Spacefleet Headquarters had vanished in a sphere of fusion fire five years ago, killing off over half the Fleet’s officers in one shot. Her mother had screamed at her, then cried, then pleaded when she had told her that she was enlisting after the invasion, but none of her mom’s words could speak louder than her father’s silent example.

  The external audio pickup in her helmet was dead, and besides the ragged rasp of her own breathing, all she could hear was the muted roar of the fire that was consuming the enemy APC. So when she rounded the end of the destroyed vehicle, she felt a dull surprise at the sight of the second APC backing up at high speed away from her, trying to bring its guns to bear on her position.

  She fell to one knee, brought the launcher up to her shoulder and used the secondary sights mounted on the weapon itself to target the vehicle only 50 meters away. There was a flash from the APC’s main gun just as she pulled the trigger and the world disappeared in a sunburst of white fire…

  Tom Crossman cursed and hugged the pavement as a grenade went off way too close to him and the five kilos of hyperexplosives beside him. The biomechs had pushed through the fire team he’d sent to stop them through the simple tactic of ignoring what would have been fatal wounds on a human and a liberal use of rifle grenades. Four of the six men and women he’d sent were dead, the other two were wounded and he and the four troops who’d been helping him set the charges to crater the road were pinned down by heavy fire.

  He pushed his carbine out in front of him, using the weapon’s sight’s connection to his helmet targeting system to aim at the biomech who’d fired the grenade. It was nearly 50 meters away and he was firing from an awkward position, but he managed to walk a burst up from the thing’s leg to its chest. It stumbled backwards, but kept its feet and tried to return fire…only to find that its weapon wouldn’t function, having been hit by Crossman’s barrage. The thing dropped the useless rifle and began to walk forward, pulling a combat knife from a sheath on its belt.

  “Jesus fucking Christ,” Tom muttered. He shifted aim and managed to put a burst into the thing’s helmet, sending it crashing to the ground, motionless.

  Tom came up to his elbows and pulled the cratering charge in front of him, ignoring the gunfire all around him as he punched a pai
r of detonators into the spongy block of hyperexplosives.

  “Colonel Stark,” he transmitted as he worked, “we have at least four KIA, two WIA and Manning is MIA---her transponder is inactive. We’re being overrun but I’m setting the last cratering charge right now.” He tapped a code into the detonator’s control panel and was in the process of synching the device with his helmet controls when a massive concussion threw him three meters sideways, tumbling off the jagged edge of the road and into the drainage ditch beside it.

  Crossman’s head swam, his vision blurred and he couldn’t seem to make his arms and legs obey his commands. Slowly, his sight cleared enough that he could see, through a web of cracks in his fractured faceplate, another of his men lying in the ditch beside him. It had to be Mathers, part of his mind realized through the fog of concussion, the junior NCO who’d been setting one of the other charges. Mather’s chest was riddled with bullets and his armor was soaked in blood; he looked very dead, and Crossman wondered if he himself looked any better.

  There wasn’t any pain yet, but he knew there would be, and he would have welcomed it if only he could have made himself move faster. He managed to get a hand beneath him and push himself up enough to look over the edge of the ditch. Three biomechs were moving towards him---their armor was scorched and bloody but they were still upright and functioning, which was more than he could say for himself. He patted at his chest, trying to find his carbine, not coherent enough to be desperate but knowing somewhere deep down that he should have been. He felt the buttstock of his carbine and yanked at it with all the strength he could muster, but it was trapped under his body and he just couldn’t move fast enough to free it…

  When the grenade exploded, his first thought was that it was aimed at him and he ducked his head instinctively at the flash and gut-punch percussion, but the fact that he was still alive made him look back up. Two of the biomechs were down, one of them in pieces---the grenade must have hit him directly, Tom thought. The third was staggered but still on its feet, trying to swing its rifle around.as the smoke from the detonation swirled around it.

 

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