Zaekiss" hood expanded as he understood the question, though he still had to reprocess all that his troops had reported and commented upon.
"They are well trained and armed, Ad-akradai," Zaekiss finally concluded, "but they are inexperienced and soft. The Humans are much more fragile than Kezdai. Many cry out and are incapacitated with just one needle wound, calling to their comrades and healers who then foolishly expose themselves to fire. Some panic easily, while others show great courage. When we first fired on them, they all showed great confusion, but given a chance to regroup, they now advance with great precision and planning."
Zaekiss stopped as he tried to think of more to say, but Khoriss was pleased with what he was told and held up his hand. He did not need more.
"We must force them to rush us, then," Khoriss announced. "Once they have taken substantial casualties, they will fall into chaos and we can break them."
"Likely, Ad-akradai. But there is no reason for them to rush us. Time is on their side, not ours."
"You are right, but there are other ways of forcing their hand. We must retreat past the large river and force them to cross under fire."
"But Ad-akradai, we would then surrender our transport to them!"
"It is useless to us, anyway. We will wait long enough for the remaining supplies to be off-loaded, and then our nuclear cannons can be repositioned and converted for ground combat."
"Against their railgun carriers? It seems a waste . . ."
"Have you seen a better target?"
"No, Khoriss, but if a Human warship were to suddenly appear . . ."
"Then we will die a couple days sooner, that is all, Zaekiss."
"Yes, Ad-akradai." Zaekiss sounded less than enthusiastic.
"Fight as well as you can for now, Zaekiss. Grind them down. Have them trade many lives for the ground you give them."
"I will."
"You will be signaled when you should retreat your forces past the bridge. Now return to your soldiers."
"Immediately, Ad-akradai Khoriss."
It had been so very long since the Kezdai had fought worldwide campaigns, Khoriss reflected as he watched Zaekiss depart. As war-p.r.o.ne as the Kezdai were, rarely would their battles involve more than just two or three factions. Little strategy or planning was needed, just tactics. With all their technological advances, with all their missiles and long range artillery, it seemed so strange that they would still care so much about river boundaries and defilade slopes. But until all armor, friend and foe alike, could fly above the trees and terrain in anti-gravity bubbles, these obstacles would continue to dominate tactical planning.
His brother would be pleased, though. Khoriss was learning much about these Humans, and he would be reporting back to Keertra soon. He worried now, however, that the Humans were learning something also. They were learning how to fight. If the remaining Is-kaldai truly decided to gather all their forces in a ma.s.s a.s.sault, they would still find well trained and armed soldiers on this world. But once Khoriss was done with them, they"d certainly no longer be inexperienced and soft.
Kuro"s emergency message had startled Serina awake out of a troubled sleep. The loud beeping had sounded just before sunrise, and at first she couldn"t figure out what it meant. Rarely had Kuro ever used her ability to send phone messages before, and never in a real emergency. Adding to her confusion, she read the note before noticing who sent it. "Large s.p.a.ceship landed at Peter"s beach," it read.
At first she thought the message had come from her father or brother, considering its content. But once she noticed that Kuro had sent it, she immediately understood her to be referring to the sand beach that her coworker Peter often camped out on.
Realizing the importance of Kuro"s message, Serina set forth to call someone in the military. Fearing that she might be asked for specifics on just how she found out about the landing, she decided to just call the main desk at Fort Hilliard, where they knew her. Unfortunately she didn"t know the woman who answered, and when asked who actually saw the ship, Serina just answered that it was an employee of hers working at the research center. Luckily that was enough, and Serina was promised that action would be taken.
Once the call was complete, Serina decided to drive out to the research center herself. She knew that she wouldn"t be able to get to sleep again that night, and she was worried about Kuro. There was no way for Serina to send back messages to Kuro from home, and Kuro had to be worried that her message would get through. Also, Kuro might have some details that could be useful to someone.
She wouldn"t stay long, however. The research center was too close to Peter"s beach for her comfort, though twenty kilometers of impa.s.sable rain forest was between them. She"d just drop in for a few minutes, she told herself, before heading home again.
The alien lay dead at the edge of the battered forest, amongst shattered trees and charred branches. The battle armor that the creature was wearing was blasted open by the ion-bolt turrets from the giant Templars that lined the road above. Darkened blood stained the soldier"s breastplate and soaked the soldier"s crimson sash tied to his waist. Colonel Ishida looked over the corpse for several minutes before attempting to remove the helmet and get a good look at the face and head.
Colonel Ishida had been in many battles before, but never had he felt as exposed as he did this morning. He had always thought that being at ground zero of a ma.s.sed Melconian offensive was the worst situation that a commander could possibly face, but he"d always faced it with a regiment of Bolo Mark x.x.xs at his back. He wasn"t used to friendly artillery arriving late or off target. He wasn"t used to being surrounded by the enemy with no ability to maneuver out. He wasn"t used to commanders screaming over the Corps channels, arguing over who was going to support who, where, and when. And he definitely wasn"t used to having hypersonic needles punching through one side of his vehicle and out the other, barely missing him.
And Walter Rice"s endless commentary on the performance of his laser didn"t help. Throughout the entire fight, Rice was recalibrating his crystal, altering its spin to cover different arcs at different speeds. Walter was also p.r.o.ne to sudden outbursts, constantly making the colonel believe that they were about to be hit.
His son"s thirty Templars were in the thick of the fight for six hours before Tigris Guard was finally ordered to take over the offensive. All along the front, Alabaster Guard units held ground while Tigris Guard units jumped past them. This occurred while the aliens changed tactics, now using hit-and-run a.s.saults with concentrations of their infantry, and plasma pistols instead of their needle rifles to blast the soldiers out of their positions. In some places, the human lines were thrown back with great losses, but in others they advanced unimpeded. Sensors showed that the aliens were withdrawing all of their armor to the rear, but the Templars of the Tigris guard refused to give chase without infantry effectively covering their flanks.
Progress would be slow in this battle.
It was late morning now, and the sky was surprisingly clear for this time of year. Distant explosions created a rumbling sound in the area that never let up. The Dela.s.sian forces had large supplies of sh.e.l.ls, and Colonel Ishida was suspecting that they"d be using all of them.
"Hold on a minute." Walter Rice said from close behind him.
Kaethan had approached along with Walter, who was now wearing his official Alabaster Coast sungla.s.ses, given to him by Sergeant Pritchard just a few minutes earlier. He was an honorary member of the unit, Zen told him, now that he had fought along side them.
The alien"s helmet was caught on something, and Toman was having trouble taking it off. Walter, though, removed a long dagger from the alien"s belt, and pried off a metal clamp at the neck. The helmet then slid off cleanly.
"Looks like some ancient Egyptian G.o.d," Kaethan commented.
The alien"s neck and left jaw were blackened by a nasty burn, but otherwise the head was undamaged. Its green eyes were open, unseeing.
"All aliens look like someone"s idea of a G.o.d," Toman said harshly. "Or demon."
"He"s big enough," Walter said.
"Three fingers, two opposable thumbs." The colonel sounded like he was making mental notes. "I don"t feel up to taking off his boots."
Kaethan noticed Walter, who had cleaned the alien dagger with a strip of cloth from the alien"s sash. He now was looking intently at the blade.
"Collect knives, Walter?" Kaethan asked.
"No," he said vacantly. "I minored in metallurgy. I make them."
"You make it sound like all metallurgists make knives."
"Most guys do. What else would you choose as a semester project? A kitchen faucet that survives a re-entry burn?"
"So instead you make daggers that survive re-entry burns?" Kaethan chided him.
"Is it usable?" The colonel asked with a serious edge. "Or is it just decorative?"
Walter surprised them both as he seemed to balance the weapon in his hand, and then he gripped it by the blade as if for throwing. Then once more he studied the blade itself that reflected the light in rippling silver and white.
"Both, actually," Walter finally said. "It has several alloys in it just for decoration, but it certainly looks like it"s been heavily used in its lifetime. This blade definitely has a purpose. I wonder if they all have them."
"They do. There are two more bodies . . . scattered . . . down that way. They both had daggers on their belts."
"Colonel," Walter asked sheepishly, "will I be shot for looting if I take a couple?"
Toman shook his head.
"That only happens when we fight each other," he a.s.sured him. "But be ready to give them up if asked."
"Will do."
Walter stood up and went off looting, then. Some nearby explosions sounded from down the road, on the far side of the rise. Kaethan stood up and looked expectantly toward the sound, but no further rounds were hitting.
"How are your men doing?" Toman asked as he studied the inside of the helmet and the electronics that were there.
"Lost five," Kaethan said solemnly as he looked back at the alien body. "Two others are seriously injured."
Only two of his Templars were totaled, but ten were heavily damaged. A small army of engineers was swarming over them now trying to get them back into fighting shape. Their railguns themselves were starting to be targeted near the end, after the aliens found out how hard it was to punch through their armor. But the alien missiles, when they got through the Templars" defenses, burned through their protection with a variety of warheads. The heavy walls between compartments helped keep many of the casualties down.
"You did very well this morning, son."
As surprised as Kaethan was at the compliment, he couldn"t accept it.
"Not one of the recon units made it out." Kaethan shook his head. "I"d call that a failure."
"They had no chance," his father rebuffed. "The aliens" needle rifles sliced right through those Haulers. I can"t believe you"re trying to use them."
With Kaethan"s silence, Toman suddenly realized that his son took that personally. He, of course, was blaming the government for using such an inferior personnel carrier, not his son . . .
"But your Templars stood up wonderfully." Toman tried to recover from his mistake, by changing the subject. "Are those Mark Twelves, Thirteens?"
"No," Kaethan replied shortly. "Just Elevens."
Toman cursed to himself silently. Another mistake. His son took offense again. This always happened whenever he tried to talk to Kaethan. It seemed destiny. At this rate Kaethan would disown him by the end of the day.
The Elevens, he formed a recovery, were actually better in some ways . . .
"Father," Kaethan said then.
"Yes?"
"Do you know why I didn"t go to the Concordiat Academy?"
Toman set down the alien helmet to his side.
"I always a.s.sumed that you were threatened with the same tortures that your mother threatened me with if I ever encouraged you to."
His son smiled and chuckled. Toman felt that this was a change for the better. Rarely had he inspired that reaction in his son.
"Just checking," Kaethan said.
"Did you actually think that I was disappointed in you for not joining? What would ever give you such an outrageous idea?"
"Nothing, Father." Kaethan stopped him. "Just checking."
"I would hope so," Toman said, and picked up the helmet again to study it.
A column of Haulers pa.s.sed them, then, driving towards the rise to the east. They wouldn"t cross over, of course. They"d just drop off their infantry, and join the ever-growing numbers of other Haulers abandoned by the side of the road. Some things, humans learned quickly. For other things, it took longer.
The sight was spectacular.
As the last of the Kezdai infantry streamed across the bridge, a hail of artillery sh.e.l.ls was raining down from above. This was the only safe crossing of the Witch River for fifty kilometers in either direction, and both sides knew it. Every howitzer and rocket howitzer in the Telville a.r.s.enal was nearly melting its barrel trying to get at the forces that were concentrated there. But not a single sh.e.l.l made it to the ground as a ma.s.sive lightning storm crackled and thundered over the valley, forking up into the sky to intercept dozens of sh.e.l.ls at a time.
Sergeant Emmet Lear of Alpha Company, First Mechanized Brigade, watched the lightning show from behind a large rock outcropping overlooking the valley, heavily shrouded by trees and underbrush. The highway was a kilometer to the north, snaking away from him, viewable through many branches and leaves. Electricity filled the air around him, causing him to suffer static shocks whenever he touched the ceramic-metal barrel of his gauss rifle. The smell and taste of ozone in the air was almost choking. His short beard itched constantly as the hairs seemed to want to stand on end. Added to that, a sharp rock goaded his ribcage as he lay p.r.o.ne, peering through the underbrush.
The highway into the valley veered left over the crest, with two kilometers of moderate slope before turning hard right to cross the four-lane bridge. On the opposite bank, the roadway ran up a much steeper slope before turning back to its left to disappear behind the forest of trees and large rock outcroppings. Any vehicle travelling on the roadway had little cover.
The valley itself was rocky, with huge boulders and rock faces peeking out from underneath the many trees that clung desperately to what soil kept them rooted. Rainforest ferns that covered most of Deladin now gave way to an undergrowth of th.o.r.n.y bushes and tall gra.s.ses. Rushing down the valley was a thunderous whitewater rapids, fed by the snow-capped mountains to the south. The Witch River had been labeled as suicidal to any adventure seeker who wished to raft it.
"Anything getting through yet, Sergeant?" asked the tired voice of Major Peter Mikolayev over his command channels.
Emmet"s p.r.o.ne position gave him a good view of the far side of the bridge three kilometers away, where the last of the alien infantry was still crossing unimpeded. The rock outcropping shielded him from the rest of the valley, though the tall periscope viewer at his side allowed him to see over part of it.
"Negative," Emmet replied simply.
There was a moment"s pause as a sigh could be heard.
"We"re shutting down, then. All units hold position and await further orders."
The command would have little effect on the front line, the sergeant knew, since the Tigris Guard had already deployed in defensive positions behind the valley crest. Captain Riggins" thirty Templars were already scattered along the stretch of roadway leading up to the valley. Emmet"s Mechanized Brigade was digging in around the tanks in the forests, and bringing their Haulers forward to support them. Everyone was already expecting this standoff to last a while and was preparing for a siege.
The bombardment continued for only a minute more after the announcement, slacking off quickly, though a few rocket howitzer rounds continued to streak overhead from their bases far to the rear. Raising his one-meter tall periscope, the sergeant sneaked a peek over the outcropping. A large part of the valley was still blocked by the rock, but Corporal Pierce of Bravo Company, hidden one kilometer north of the road, could see the remainder.
Movement immediately caught his attention, and with a twist of the ungainly periscope, he zoomed in on a line of vehicles.
"An armored column is entering the valley," he said into his headset. "I see ten vehicles, moving slowly. More are following . . ."
Emmet"s first thought was that the aliens had now tested their defenses and considered it safe to invest some armor into the valley. He wasn"t overly concerned that they"d sortie since all of their infantry were now safely evacuated.
"Pierce just got sniped," reported Captain Larson of Bravo Company. "a.s.signing another observer . . ."
Sergeant Lear swore under his breath as he continued to watch the arriving column.
"Twenty vehicles," he updated the count. "One-fifty tons . . . ten wheelers . . . energy cannons . . . twelve-wheeled ma.s.s drivers . . ."
Sergeant Pierce was a personal friend of Emmet"s, and his stomach tightened at the thought of him just taking a needle. There shouldn"t have been any reason why Pierce exposed himself. They had their periscopes and good positions. Something must have drawn Pierce out, or else their lines had been infiltrated.
"Twenty-six vehicles total in two columns," Lear updated again, trying not to think about it, "still approaching the bridge."
Yesterday, Emmet Lear had been a dealer in heavy-construction vehicles. That life was forgotten at the moment, but his civilian occupation gave him an advantage at judging the size of the war machines that were rolling down the opposite slope. The sight of such large armored vehicles on wheels disturbed Lear, however, who was used to tracks being on any ground vehicle over fifty tons. Although this would give them a much better speed on pavement, he considered, they"d be very limited once the battle turned off-road. A few of the vehicles were also of a tractor-trailer design, which he knew were extremely unstable on broken terrain at higher speeds.