Somebody was going to have to go in and identify the sightings better than the remotes could do it--and if the Glorios were there, distract them up close and personal while the UATVs came in.
"I"d better do it, Tops," she said. The squad with the two vehicles was really Jenkins". "I"ll take Pineapple and Marwitz."
Half the string of mules were in the water when the Glorio sergeant--Squad Comrade--heard the grinding, whirring noise.
"What"s that?" he cried.
The ford was in a narrow cut, where the river was broad but shallow; there was little s.p.a.ce between the high walls that was not occupied by the gravelled bed. That made it quite dark even in the daytime. On a moonless night like this it was a slit full of night, with nothing but starlight to cast a faint sparkle on the water. The guerrillas were working with the precision of long experience, leading the gaunt mules down through the knee-deep stream and up the other side, while a company kept overwatch on both sides. They were not expecting trouble from the depleted enemy forces, but their superior night vision meant that a raid was always possible. Even an air attack was possible, although it was months since there had been any air action except around the main base at Cuchimba.
When the Bolo Mark III came around the curve of the river half a kilometer downstream, the guerrillas reacted with varieties of blind panic. It was only a dim bulk, but the river creamed away in plumes from its four tracks, and it ground on at forty KPH with the momentum of a mountain that walked.
The sergeant fired his AK--a useless thing to do even if the target had been soft-skinned. A bar of light reached out from the tank"s frontal slope, and the man exploded away from the stream of hypervelocity slugs.
A team on the left, the western bank, of the river opened up with a four-barreled heavy machine gun intended for antiaircraft use. They were good; the stream of half-ounce bullets hosed over the Mark III"s armor like a river of green-tracer fire arching into the night. The sparks where the projectiles bounced from the density-enhanced durachrome were bright fireflies in the night. Where the layer of softer ablating material was still intact there was no spark, but a very careful observer might have seen starlight on the metal exposed by the bullets" impact.
There were no careful observers on this field tonight; at least, none outside the hull of the Mark III. The infinite repeaters nuzzled forward through the dilating ports on its hull. Coils gripped and flung 50mm projectiles at velocities that burned a thin film of plasma off the ultra-dense metal that composed them. They left streaks through the air, and on the retinas of anyone watching them. The repeaters were intended primarily for use against armor, but they had a number of options. The one selected now broke the projectiles into several hundred shards just short of the target, covering a dozen square yards. They ripped into the multibarrel machine gun, its mount--and incidentally its operators--like a mincing machine pounded down by a G.o.d. Friction-heated ammunition cooked off in a crackle and fireworks fountain, but that was almost an anticlimax.
"Cease fire! Cease fire!" Comrade Chavez bellowed.
It was an unnecessary command for those of the Glorios blundering off into the dark, screaming their terror or conserving their breath for flight. A substantial minority had remained, even for this threat. They heard and obeyed, except for one team with the best antiarmor weapons the guerrillas possessed, a cl.u.s.ter of hypervelocity missiles. One man painted the forward tread with his laser designator, while the second launched the missiles. They left the launcher with a mild chuff of ga.s.ses, then accelerated briefly with a sound like a giant tiger"s retching scream.
If the missiles had struck the tread, they would probably have ripped its flexible durachrome alloy to shreds--although the Mark III would have lost only a small percentage of its mobility. They did not, since the tank"s 4mm had blown the designator to shards before they covered even a quarter of the distance to their target. The operator was a few meters away. Nothing touched him but one fragment tracing a line across his cheek. He lay and trembled, not moving even to stop the blood which flowed down his face from the cut and into his open mouth.
Two of the missiles blossomed in globes of white-blue fire, intercepted by repeater rounds. A third tipped upwards and flew off into the night until it self-destructed, victim of the laser designator"s last twitch. The fourth was close enough for the idiot-savant microchip in its nose to detect the Mark III and cla.s.sify it as a target. It exploded as well--as it was designed to do. The explosion forged a round plate of tungsten into a shape like a blunt arrowhead and plunged it forward with a velocity even greater than the missile"s own.
It clanged into the armor just below the muzzles of the infinite repeaters, and spanged up into the night. There was a fist-sized dimple in the complex alloy of the tank"s hull, shining because it was now plated with a molecule-thick film of pure tungsten.
"Cease fire," Chavez screamed again.
The Bolo Mark III was very close now. Most of the mules had managed to scramble up on the further bank and were galloping down the river, risking their legs in the darkness rather than stay near the impossibly huge metal object. Men stayed in their positions, because their subconscious was convinced that flight was futile. The tank grew larger and larger yet; the water fountained from either side, drenching some of the guerrillas. Comrade Chavez was among them, standing not ten feet from where it pa.s.sed. He stood erect, and spat into its wake.
"Cowards," he murmured. It was uncertain exactly who he was referring to. Then more loudly: "The cowards are running from us--it fired at n.o.body but those actively attacking it. Fall in! Resume the operation!"
It took a few minutes for those who had stayed in their positions to shake loose minds stunned by the sheer ma.s.siveness of the thing that had pa.s.sed them by. Collecting most of the men who"d fled took hours, but eventually they stood sheepishly in front of their commander.
"I should have you all shot," he said. A few started to shake again; there had been a time when Chavez would have had them shot, and they could remember it. "But the Revolution is so short of men that even you must be conserved--if only to stop a bullet that might otherwise strike a true comrade of the Glorious Way. Get back to work!"
Bethany Martins gripped the bowie in hatchet style, with the sharpened edge out. The blackened metal quivered slightly, and her lips were curled back behind the faceplate in a grimace of queasy antic.i.p.ation. The weapon was close to the original that Rezin Bowie had designed, over a foot long and point heavy, but the blade was of an alloy quite similar to the Mark III"s armor. It had to be sharpened with a hone of synthetic diamond, but it would take a more than razor edge and keep it while it hacked through mild steel.
The Glorio sentry was watching out the front door of the house. She could tell that from the rear of the building because it was made of woven fronds, and they were virtually transparent to several of the sensors in her helmet. She could also tell that all the previous inhabitants of the three-room hut were dead, both because of the smell and because their bodies showed at ambient on the IR scan. That made real sure they wouldn"t blow the Glorio ambush, and it was also standard procedure for the Way. The inhabitants of San Miguel had cooperated with the authorities, and that was enough. Cooperation might include virtually anything, from joining a Civic Patrol to selling some oranges to a pa.s.sing vehicle from the 15th.
Generally speaking, Martins hated killing people with knives although she was quite good at it. One of the benefits of commissioned rank was that she seldom had to, any more. This Glorio was going to be an exception in both senses of the word.
Step. The floor of the hut was earth, laterite packed to the consistency of stone over years of use, and brushed quite clean. A wicker door had prevented the chickens and other small stock outside from coming in. There was an image of the Bleeding Heart, unpleasantly lifelike, over the hearth of adobe bricks and iron rods in the kitchen. Coals cast an IR glow over the room, and her bootsoles made only a soft minimal noise of contact.
Step. Through behind the Glorio. Only the focus of his attention on the roadway below kept him from turning. He was carrying a light drum-fed machine gun, something nonstandard--it looked like a Singapore Industries model. Her body armor would stop sh.e.l.l fragments and pistol-calibre ammunition, but that thing would send fragments of the softsuit right through her rib cage.
Step. Arm"s length away in pitch blackness. Pitch blackness for him, but her faceplate painted it like day. Better than day . . .
Martins" arm came across until the back of the blade was touching her neck. She slashed at neck height. Something warned the man, perhaps air movement or the slight exhalation of breath, perhaps just years of survival honing his instincts. He began to turn, but the supernally keen edge still sliced through neck muscles and through the vertebrae beneath them, to cut the spinal cord in a single brutal chop. The sound was like an axe striking green wood; she dropped the knife and lunged forward to catch the limp body, ignoring the rush of wastes and the blood that soaked the torso of her armor as she dragged him backwards. The machine gun clattered unnoticed to the ground.
The lieutenant dragged the guerilla backward, then set him down gently on the floor. Only a few twitches from the severed nerve endings drummed his rope-sandaled heels against the floor. She paused for a moment, panting with the effort and with adrenaline still pulsing the veins in her throat, then stepped forward into the doorway.
"Jenkins," she murmured. A risk, but the Glorio elint capacity had never been very good and had gotten worse lately. "I"m marking the heavy stuff. Mark."
From point-blank, the shapes of machine-guns and rocket launchers showed clearly. She slid the aiming pips of her faceplate over each crew-served weapons position, then over the individual riflemen, the second-priority targets. Each time the pips crossed a target she tapped a stud on the lower inside edge of her helmet, marking it for the duplicate readout in Jenkins" helmet. The guerrillas had tried their best to be clever; there were low fires inside a number of the houses, to disguise the IR signatures, and as backup there were bound civilians grouped in what resembled fire teams around pieces of metal--hoes, cooking grills and the like--to fox the sonic and microradar scanners. Some of them were so clever that she had to spend a minute or two figuring them out. When in doubt, she marked them.
It occurred to her that an objective observer might consider the technological gap between the Company"s troopers and the Glorios unfair. Although the gross advantage of numbers and firepower the guerrillas had these days went a long way to make it up.
On the other hand, she wasn"t objective and didn"t give a d.a.m.n about fair.
"Got it," Jenkins said.
"Pineapple, Red?" she asked. Short clicks from Ramerez and Marwitz. She slid her rifle around, settling down to the ground and bracing the sling against the hand that held the forestock. The aiming pip settled on the rear of the slit trench that held the 12.7 mm. Four men in the trench . . .
"Now." Diesels blatted as the UATVs revved up and tore down the road toward the village. She stroked her trigger, and the night began to dissolve in streaks of tracer and fire. A cantina disintegrated as Pineapple"s grenade launcher caught the RPG team waiting there.
"s.h.i.t, why now?" Martins said.
Captain McNaught"s voice in her ears was hoa.r.s.e with pain and with the drugs that controlled it. He could still chuckle.
" . . . and at the worst possible time," he said.
Firebase Villa was on fire this night. The mortars at its core were firing, their muzzle flashes lighting up the night like flickers of heat lightning. Shump-shump-shump, the three-round clips blasting out almost as fast as a submachine-gun. The crews would have a new set of rounds in the hopper almost as quickly, but the mortars fired sparingly. They were the only way to cover the dead ground where Glorio gunners might set up their own weapons, and ammunition was short. Bombardment rockets from outside the range of the defending mortars dragged across the sky with a sound like express trains. When the sound stopped there was a wait of a few seconds before the kthud of the explosion inside the perimeter.
The pilot of the tiltrotor cut into the conversation. "I got just so much fuel, and other people to pull out," he said. His voice was flat as gunmetal, with a total absence of emotion that was a statement in itself.
"Can you get me a landing envelope?" he said.
"Look, we"ll cover-" Martins began.
A four-barreled heavy lashed out toward Firebase Villa with streams of green tracer. Yellow-white answered it; neither gun was going to kill the other, at extreme ranges and with both firing from narrow slits. The Glorio gun was using an improvised bunker, thrown up over the last hour, but it was good enough for this. Parts of the perimeter minefield still smoldered where rockets had dragged explosive cord over it in a net to detonate the mines. Some of the bodies of the sappers that had tried to exploit that hole in the mines and razor wire still smoldered as well. Many of the short-range guns around the perimeter were AI-driven automatics, 4mm gatlings with no nerves and very quick reaction times.
"h.e.l.l you will, Martins," McNaught wheezed. "There"s a battalion of them out there. I think-" he coughed "-I think Comrade Chavez has walked the walk with us so long he just can"t bear the thought of us leaving at all." The captain"s voice changed timber. "Flyboy, get lost. You try bringing that bird down here, you"ll get a second job as a colander."
"h.e.l.l," the pilot muttered. Then: "Goodbye."
Martins and McNaught waited in silence, except for the racket of the firefight. The Glorios crunched closer, men crawling forward from cover to cover. Many of them died, but not enough, and the bombardment rockets kept dragging their loads of explosive across the sky.
It"s not often you"re condemned to death, Martins thought. Her mind was hunting through alternatives, plans, tactics--the same process as always. Only there wasn"t anything you could do with seventy effectives to attack a battalion of guerrillas who were hauling out all the stuff they"d saved up. Even if it was insane, insane even in terms of the Glorios" own demented worldview.
"Bug out," McNaught said, in a breathless rasp. "Nothing you can do here. They"re all here, bug out and make it back to the coast, you can get some transport there. That"s an order, Lieutenant."
If there was anything left to go back north for. The latest reports were even more crazy-confused than the first.
"Save your breath, sir," she said.
The Company had been together down here for a long time. They were all going home together. One way or another.
"Movement," someone said. She recognized the voice of the communications specialist back in Villa. Like everyone else, she doubled in two other jobs; in this case, monitoring the remote sensors. "I got movement . . . vehicle movement. Hey, big vehicle."
n.o.body said anything for a minute or two, in the draw where the two UATVs waited.
"That"s impossible," Martins whispered.
The technician"s voice was shaky with unshed tears. "Unless the Glorios have a 150-ton tank, it"s happening anyway," she said.
They were a kilometer beyond the Glorio outposts in the draw. The river ran to their left, circling in a wide arch around Firebase Villa. Water jetted in smooth arcs to either bank as the Mark III climbed through the rapids. In the shallow pools beyond the wave from the treads was more like a pulsing. Then the tank stopped, not a hundred meters from the UATVs" position.
"Vinatelli," Martins breathed. "You beautiful little geek!"
The tank remained silent. Another rocket sailed in, a globe of reddish fire trough the sky.
"What are you waiting for?" Martins cursed.
"I have no orders, Lieutenant," the newbie"s voice said. "Last mission parameters accomplished."
Something dead and cold trailed fingers up Martin"s spine. He"s gone over the edge, she thought. Aloud, she snapped: "Fight, Vinatelli, for Christ"s sake. Fight!"
"Fight whom, Lieutenant?"
"The Glorios. The people who"re attacking the firebase, for f.u.c.k"s sake. Open fire."
"Acknowledged, Lieutenant."
The night came apart in a dazzle of fire.
"I think I know--I think I know what happened," Martins whispered.
Nothing moved on the fissured plain around Firebase Villa, except what the wind stirred, and the troopers out collecting the weapons. It had taken the Mark III only about an hour to end it, and the last half of that had been hunting down fugitives. The final group included Comrade Chavez, in a well-shielded hillside cave only three klicks away, which explained a great deal when the tank blew most of the hillside away to get at it. He"d been hiding under their noses all along.
She slung her M-35 down her back and worked her fingers, taking a deep breath before she started climbing the rungs built into the side armor of the Mark III. Some of them were missing, but that was no problem, no problem . . . The hatch opened easily.
Vinatelli must have had his crash harness up when the bridge blew. From the look of the body, he"d been reaching for a cola can. His head must have been at just the right angle to crack his spine against the forward control surfaces.
"So that"s why Vinatelli didn"t want to come out," she said.
McNaught was watching through the remotes of her helmet. "So it is alive," he said.
Martin shook her head, then spoke: "No." Her tone shifted. "Markee. Why didn"t you go back to the coast?"
"Mission parameters did not require retracing route," the tank said, in the incongruously sultry voice. "Last established mission parameters indicated transit to point Firebase Villa."
"What are your mission parameters. Correction, what were your mission parameters."
"Lieutenant Bethany Martins is to go home," the machine said.
Martins slumped, sitting on the combing. The smell inside wouldn"t be too bad, not after only six hours in air conditioning.
"It was Vinatelli," she said. "He was the dreamy sort. He had it programmed to do a Clever Hans routine if an officer started making requests when he was asleep, and reply in his own voice."
"Clever Hans?" the captain asked.
"A horse somebody trained to "answer" questions. It sensed subliminal clues and behaved accordingly, so it looked like it understood what the audience was saying. You can get a good AI system to do the same thing, word-a.s.sociation according to what you say. You"d swear it was talking to you, when it"s really got no more real comprehension than a toaster."
"Why did it come here?"
"That was the last order. Go to Firebase Villa; it"s got enough discretion to pick another route out of its data banks. And to shoot back if attacked in a combat zone. But that"s all, that"s all it did. Like ants; all they"ve got is a few feedback loops but they get a d.a.m.ned lot done."
She rose, shaking her head.
"Which leaves the question of what we do now," the Captain said.
"Oh, I don"t think there"s much question on that one," Martins said.
She pulled off her helmet and rubbed her face. Despite everything, a grin broke through. Poor ignorant b.a.s.t.a.r.d, she thought, looking down at Vinatelli. The tank was everything you said it was. She"d been right too, though: a newbie was still cold meat unless he wised up fast.
"We"re all going home. With Markee to lead the way."
CAMELOT.
S.N. Lewitt
They shouldn"t have named this place Camelot. Even I know that, in the end, the dream didn"t hold, that entropy and chaos and the end of law overcame all the ma.s.sed forces of chivalry of the age. And in this age there never was any chivalry to begin with.
But then I came here too, to forget the wars and the dead and the stink of battlefields. Ten years ago this was a wonderful place, a bustling town surrounded by rich green fields. There was plenty for everyone and plenty left over to trade for the technology we couldn"t produce ourselves. We had to buy the small psychotronics that cleaned the streets and kept the walls repaired, the weather planner and the genetics scope that we mostly bought to use on the sheep for breeding purposes, but sometimes was used by married couples who had trouble conceiving or by the medical center to diagnose some rare genetic anomaly.
I was not the only immigrant to Camelot. Even with strict restrictions on citizenship, at least a quarter of the population were refugees. We had run from the wars, from the Empire, from the restrictions of the technoverse, from the normal life that normal people lead near the center of the universe. Not everyone likes the bug life of the techno-urbs. Some of us waited for years for our permission to emigrate was granted, and years more to pa.s.s all the psych probes required for permission to enter Camelot.
It had been worth it. After the death and power I had seen, the gentle green hills and gossip in the town square were better than anything a medvac healing team had even devised. I had enough in saved wages to buy a small pear orchard in the valley with a stone house and a cow.
I could forget the wars here. The smell of death, of putrid flesh and fusing circuitry, had been reduced to the merest shred of memory. If at night I sometimes dreamed of hulks greater than the Camelot Town Hall thundering over ravaged terrain, the charge of the Dinochrome Brigades, it was my own secret.
After three years of sanity, tending the trees and milking the cow, I married a native Camelot girl. Isabelle brought her chickens and her geese to the yard, started a kitchen garden with dill and rosemary and thyme, and filled the house with the sounds of singing. Isabelle had a voice like the angels, and she sang as she worked and she worked all the time. And when I dreamed of the war, of the flaming h.e.l.lbore frying an Enemy outpost, a single Bolo left powerless and dead on the field, my best friend found mindless in an Enemy holding pen, Isabelle would hold me and tell me it was all over now and give me warm milk and a slice of fresh pie. And I could believe that it was all over, that I had found perfection. I had, in fact, found Paradise. And I kept wondering when the dream would be shattered.