Read Come and Take Them-eARC Online

Authors: Tom Kratman

Tags: #Military, #Science Fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction

Come and Take Them-eARC (38 page)

In an earlier time the Taurans might have been safe enough once they had found a reasonably secure position. Piña’s old Balboan Defense Force had not been so very well trained. The tercios
of Carrera’s legion, however, had in years earlier and recent been humiliated often enough, badly enough, at the training center at
Fuerte
Cameron—often by closely placed and undetected recon parties—that counter-reconnaissance had become something of an automatic action, if not even a fetish.

Three mobilized maniples of regular and reservists began to sweep the exterior of the base for infiltrators and spies some time around midnight. While most of the mobilized legions and cohorts units had very restrictive rules of engagement, the First Corps, and a few others who were in position to safeguard the secret of the hidden cadets, were under orders to shoot on sight.

* * *

The commando—arguably over-officered in comparison to most Gallic units—had a lieutenant in charge, assisted by an
adjudant
as his second in command. They carried their own radio, occasionally trading off. Each of the four teams, of four men each, consisted of a sergeant, a
caporal
, and two privates, except for one of the teams which was led by a
sergent-chef
, a senior sergeant.

Since they expected to be here for a while, three days at a minimum, before extraction, the troops split up their duties, watch on, watch off. Thus, it was the second in command,
Adjudant
Tréville
, who was watching when the first Balboans were glimpsed through the jungle trees.

“Lieutenant,” whispered the
adjudant,
“we’ve got people behind us and I’m sure they’re not ours.” When that didn’t work
Tréville
placed a hand over his officer’s mouth, shook him slightly, and repeated the warning.

The lieutenant’s eyes came open. He nodded for the sergeant to remove his hand, and asked, “Where?”

Wordlessly,
Tréville
pointed to the barely silhouetted figures of men—the shadows told of rifles in their hands—less than one hundred and fifty meters away, to the northeast.

“Get the rest of the men up,” said the lieutenant. “It’s time to get out of here.”

“Sir.”

* * *

“Did you hear that?” asked a Balboan sergeant in a low whisper.

“Hear what, Sarge?” answered his corporal.

“I don’t know what it was. A rustle of grass maybe. Then again”—the Balboan sergeant shook his head—“then again, maybe not.” The sergeant motioned for his squad to halt while he listened with more care and attention.

* * *

“Shit. I think they’ve spotted us.” Tréville moved a thumb slowly and silently took his rifle off of safe.

The lieutenant gave the hand and arm signal for his section to take up hasty ambush positions. There was some unavoidable sound from that, rifles being propped up, knees scraping the ground, the little creaks of stiffened joints.

* * *

“I heard
that,
” quietly agreed the Balboan corporal. “An animal, maybe?”

The squad leader shook his head. Placing his radio’s microphone to his lips, he reported a possible contact and asked for assistance. “Wait,” was the reply. “We’ll mount a platoon and have them there in about ten minutes. Out.”

* * *

“Oh, shit. They’ve called for help,” announced Tréville, still in hushed tones. He had heard, faintly, the sound of the Balboan radio breaking “squelch.”

The Gallic lieutenant immediately called for evacuation at a precoordinated point some twelve hundred meters away. To Tréville he said, “We’ve got to break contact and get out of here. Get ready to take out these guys and move like hell to the PZ.” The “PZ” was the pickup zone where they would be met by the recovering helicopter. “But…no helicopter’s going to be here in less than an hour. I think we have to fight.”

Tréville crawled from man to man, giving the order to prepare to fight or to run, at command.

The Balboan sergeant cursed the slowness of the reinforcing platoon. Impatiently, he lifted his head, keeping as close as possible to a tree trunk, for a better view and, more importantly, a better listen.

* * *

Just raise your head a little more, old son,
thought Tréville as he took careful aim through his rifle’s starlight scope. In the grainy, greenish light of the scope’s viewing lens he saw the Balboan sweep his helmeted head from side to side, obviously looking for something. Tréville began to squeeze the trigger.

* * *

“I can’t see or hear shit,” said the Balboan sergeant to the corporal, still keeping his voice in a whisper. “If there’s…”

A single shot rang out, followed by a fusillade from the Taurans. The sergeant heard none of it, however, as the first bullet had entered his right temple, blowing his brains out the left rear of his skull.

Initially paralyzed, the Balboans were slow to return fire, trying desperately to find some cover from the storm of copper-covered lead that assailed them. The corporal was the first to gather his wits, which was the more surprising in that the late sergeant’s brains had fallen across the corporal’s face and body. Other rifles, and a few moments later a machine gun, joined in as their bearers found discipline and duty a greater factor than fear. Within a minute, both sides were thoroughly pinned by each other’s wild fire.

Not that the Balboans were hitting anything. Only their machine gunner had a night vision scope, and he was not in position to see much with it. The other Balboans couldn’t see anything but muzzle flashes, which were notoriously difficult points of aim at night. Instead, they just sprayed the general area to their front, counting on chance to at least hold the Taurans until help arrived. Once the rest of his men had joined the fight, the corporal patted the ground for the microphone. His first call was not to the reinforcing platoon, but to the on call mortar section. As he spoke to the mortars, the corporal became aware of anguished cries from his own side.

* * *

A few miles away, in the 1st Mechanized Tercio motor pool, a complete mechanized platoon looked up almost as a single man. Suddenly a flood of tracers arced through the sky. The reports of heavy automatic fire followed. A lackadaisical preparation quickly became frenzied. The platoon’s four Ocelots, and forty odd soldiers, were heading for the post gate in less than two minutes. On the post parade field, a mortar section began to fall in on their guns.

* * *

Fifty miles away from the desperate little battle, three helicopters, two gunships and one troop carrier made their tortuous way across and above the jungle. The helicopters dipped into little valleys—had the crews not been inured to the constant roller-coastering they might well have thrown up—and barely scraped over the treetops.

The crews of all three helicopters heard frantic cries for help from the commandos they were racing to rescue. They were treated, if that’s the right word, to a blow-by-blow description of the unequal fight.

“Romeo Five-three, this is Charlie Two-seven. You’ve got to help us now.”…

“Five-three, Two-seven. There’s no way we can make it to the PZ—” The call cut off temporarily as a nearby mortar explosion forced the radio operator’s head down. “…we’re taking heavy fire; mortar fire. We are stuck. Come in soonest with full firepower.”…

“Five-three, Two-seven. The lieutenant is down…crap, he’s dead. Took one right through the head. Shit! Five-three, you’ve got to get us out now!”

A new voice spoke. It was still Tauran. “This is Two-seven! I say again, Charlie Two-seven. We’re taking heavy direct fire from at least four armored vehicles! They’re chewing us…the
adjudant
’s down…”

That was the last transmission heard from Charlie Two-seven by Romeo Five-three.

Chapter Thirty-seven

Just because something isn’t a lie does not mean that it isn’t deceptive. A liar knows that he is a liar, but one who speaks mere portions of truth in order to deceive is a craftsman of destruction.


Criss Jami

La Chorrera
Military Academy, Balboa, Terra Nova

Although using teenagers as soldiers has its disadvantages, there are equally weighty advantages. For one thing, they are extremely easily led. For another, they are so naturally far below adults on the social scale that they don’t ask too many questions of their adult leaders; they obey. For a third, they tend to be somewhat unrealistically enthusiastic and idealistic.

That idealism counts for much. Though it is an element of received wisdom that causes count for nothing, and that soldiers fight only for their comrades, this is, at best, a half-truth and, like other half-truths, is wholly misleading. For the cost of battle is blood: wounded, crippled, and dead friends. Those costs weigh. Eventually they can weigh so heavily that the soldiers stop fighting altogether. Why fight, after all, when it involves such loss and pain? Why fight for your comrades when you can knock them over the heads and hide them from friend and enemy?

This is where causes and ideals come in. They justify, at least in part, that pain and those losses. They are usually not infinite in their strength and reach, but they need not be. They need only last, or to cause those who adhere to them to last, just a few days, a few hours, sometimes just a few minutes, longer than their adversaries.

* * *

Only Suarez and a few of his key staff knew the real reason the Corps was out maneuvering through the godforsaken jungle.

Approximately nine hundred young, idealistic, and enthusiastic cadets, with their adult instructors, sat waiting for parts of Second and Fifth Legions, plus Thirteenth Brigade, Twenty-second Combat Support Legion—in other words the bulk of Second Corps’ regular and reserve echelons—to sweep by on their maneuvers toward, but not into, the Transitway Area. The adults supervising the cadets put on a good show, whatever their fears. The young boys sat essentially without fear.

Places would be left by Second Corps, several large holes on the ground with neither troops nor heavy equipment. Into this space the cadet cohort would fit. Indeed, it would fit and be lost to outside observers among the thirteen thousand other mobilized troops of Second Corps.

The Corps would sweep forward, also picking up the cadets from the Arraijan Military Academy on the way—a different set of spaces was to be left for them—until it reached the old Transitway borders. At the same time, it was expected, if there were Taurans on the ground looking, that the mass of Second Corps would probably drive them out of eyeshot until the cadets had hidden.

Until they disappeared into underground hides, warehouses, housing developments, and whatever else had been prepared for them—which included at least one sewer—the cadets and their instructors, perhaps twenty-one hundred officers, warrants, noncoms, and boys, from both schools combined, would blend well with—indeed they would be indistinguishable from—the mobilized soldiers of the Second Corps.

Then, once the boys and their cadres were well hidden, and the Taurans in an absolute panic over the suddenly materialized threat, the men of Second Corps would go home on trucks and on foot, leaving the Tauran Union Security Force-Balboa none the wiser and feeling much more secure.

* * *

Aleksandr Sitnikov, one time officer in His Marxist Majesty’s Fifth Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment, had joined Suarez’s party early, along with the former’s small staff, then marched along with them for the duration. Well over fifty, now, Sitnikov still didn’t look a lot older, nor much different, than he had when he’d first come to the legion as a contract instructor on armored fighting vehicles and armored warfare. Balding then, he was almost totally bald now. Other than that, though, he could still pass for a man of about forty or even a bit less. His fierce regimen of physical fitness training probably accounted for some of that. More was to be found in his boyish, good natured smile.

At a construction site not far from the border, Sitnikov and Suarez shook hands. “We’re counting on you, you Volgan bastard,” said the latter.

“The boys won’t let you down,” Sitnikov assured the Balboan.

“I’m sure they won’t,” Suarez agreed, “and I shall offer a special prayer that fate doesn’t let them down.”

Military Academy
Sergento
Juan Malvegui,
Puerto Lindo,
Balboa, Terra Nova

Cristobal was the touchiest province to move the cadets around in. Road nets were few, land very constricted by the Shimmering Sea and the lake that formed such a large chunk of the Transitway. Moreover, a substantial number of cadets had to be infiltrated to Clay Dairy Farm—right into the middle of territory that was jointly controlled. Only the density of the jungle and the secondary importance of the area stood on Balboa’s side.

Carrera had been almost ready to change the plans for the
Puerto Lindo
cadets, to let them fight with their own small arms and the heavier equipment that had been stashed in the nearby Sabanita Maintenance Facility, even though it was not in an ideal position for their mission.

In the end, it was the possibility that he was ready to change his plans to save his boy that forced him to force himself to leave them alone, except for asking Muñoz-Infantes, at Fort William, to change his plans and dispositions, to put on a more aggressive display with his battalion of Castilians than Carrera had originally asked for.

* * *

Ham and the other eighteen hundred cadets were awakened—at least the few who had been able to find some sleep had been awakened; Hamilcar Carrera was not among them—at “Zero Dark Hundred” by the cadre who had already been up for an hour by then, barring only the few who had been able to snatch an hour or two’s sleep. An hour later, an hour before sunrise, the entire
Puerto Lindo
corps of cadets, with their leaders, over twenty-one hundred strong, assembled on the glacis of the old fort. The cadres, a mix of Volgans and Balboans, carried pistols only. The cadets carried a mix of baseball bats, bunk adapters, unfolded entrenching tools, ace handles, and a hefty number of homemade clubs, courtesy of the trees near the academy. Each cadet maniple, further, provided a four-man team bearing signs like “
Balboa es Soberana en la Area del Transitway,
” “Taurans out of our Country,” or something in the same general spirit.

After receiving the report, Chapayev, commandant of the school, ordered, “Right…face. Forward…MARCH!” and the entire twenty-one hundred strong corps, uniformed and carrying their normal field packs, marched out the main gate of the school, past the memorial to the heroic sergeant who was, uniquely, their namesake, around the beautiful bay, through the ramshackle town, past the neater ship yard, and down the road to Cristobal, about twenty miles away.

Pipes and drums from the school’s band alternated their positions in the column to give every maniple a fair ration of resounding bang-bang-bang and cats-locked-in-a-death-struggle. When the band rested, the boys picked up on their own with a medley of patriotic songs.

The latest census said that on the order of sixty thousand people lived on or near the roadway between
Puerto Lindo
and Cristobal. At least eighteen thousand of those joined the cadets. Schools emptied out. Businesses closed. A group of Santandern hookers from a brothel in
Sagrada Incarnación
left work early, and without anybody even having to pay the Balboan bartender to let them go.

At the same time, Jimenez had sent two tercios, which was to say, at this mobilization level about two cohorts, uniformed and fully armed, to march, one of them, on Fort Melia, and the other to begin blowing up rubber boats on the eastern face of Cristobal, the one facing the Tauran-held Fort Tecumseh, across the bay.

Jimenez, sitting in his Fourth Corps headquarters in Cristobal, just imagined the panic in the Tunnel, the existence of which was by no means secret, as a dozen or more battalions, at both ends of the Transitway, converged on their mandate borders before pulling back. In the case of the Castilians, under Muñoz-Infantes, there was no pulling back beyond borders; they were already inside, and in a de facto state of mutiny,
within
the Transitway borders.

Contemplating the Taurans’ panic, Jimenez thought,
And they’re likely to notice a thousand kids disappearing in all that? I
really
don’t think so.

* * *

Ham, now a second in command of a platoon of cadets, was footsore and tired by the time the column reached the fifty-seven buses parked in half a dozen spread-out splotches just before the split in the roadway that led, one way to Cristobal, the other past the town of Magdalena, then toward Forts Williams and Melia. Between cadets, legionaries, civilians, and, of course, the couple of dozen Santandern hookers, there were probably forty thousand people milling about. In that crowd, Ham took the half of the platoon that was his responsibility, ducked into a bus, changed clothing rapidly—a tough thing while lying flat on one’s back on the narrow, dirty rubber mats of the bus’s floor—and emerged into the crowd into which the boys now blended much, much better.

By this time, Ham’s half of the platoon included all five of the Pashtian boys that had been sent to school with him. Carrera wanted the boy to learn, yes, and wasn’t going to shelter him from the risks he needed to run if he were to lead others. But he wasn’t a fool either and fully intended that his son, heir, and—with luck—replacement would have every possible chance to survive, even if it cost a few Pashtian boys.

“Where to now, Sergeant?” one of the younger cadets asked Ham, as a half a load of still younger and still uniformed cadets piled onto the vacated bus.

“It’s a place they used to call ‘Clay Dairy Farm.’ No cows there anymore, only some houses and some small warehouses…that sort of thing. Just follow me. And don’t march; mill.” He led them back in the direction from which they’d come along
Avenida
Scott, then north along a side road that led to a small housing development on one side, and to a temporary storage yard on the other. The yard was guarded by a uniformed civilian, bearing only a shotgun. There was a Volgan warrant officer there, though, named Ustinov, to convince the guard to let the boys into the wired-in compound. Ustinov was designated as maniple commander for the coming battle.

Ham didn’t know, but he was pretty sure that Ustinov’s next mission would be to disarm the guard and disappear him for a while. As it turned out, he was wrong. The guard position was another one of those veteran-only jobs. The guard would stay there, guarding the boys now more than other people’s property, until the fighting began.

The other part of Ham’s platoon, under his seventeen-year-old boss, Cadet Signifer Delgado, arrived an hour and a half later, Delgado’s group having instructions to mill around a bit more indirectly. By the time they arrived, Ham, his boys, and Ustinov had the partitions between certain theoretically rentable compartments opened, several dozen F-26 rifles out, ammunition for those and two rocket grenade launchers broken down and ready for issue, along with hand grenades, signal grenades, smoke grenades, radios, night vision, batteries, first aid and other medical equipment, and whatever else a platoon of infantry might need.

And then they turned on the radio and waited for the code phrase. They had to turn the radio’s volume up very high, since the daily rain, once it commenced to pound the tin roof, made hearing normal sounds all but impossible.

* * *

Among the other organizations at the academy were several clubs that catered to the cadets’ aspirations for branch assignments, when they enlisted. The legion paid serious attention to those clubs and aspirations, too. After all, why pay to train some man to do X who has already been trained as a boy to do Y? The clubs included, among others, the Cazador club, which was nowhere near as difficult as
Escuela de Cazadores,
a close cognate of Federated States Army Ranger School. Mostly the Cazador Club taught techniques and engaged in some very limited character building and toughening exercises. Then there was the Artillery Club, a number of the members of which were currently falling in on half a dozen containerized 85mm guns with all the accouterments and ammunition. The Medical Club had mostly split up to provide platoon medics, though a dozen or so stayed with the school’s two doctors, in a couple of hotel rooms not far from the presumptive scene of the action.

Then there were clubs for air defense artillery, combat engineers, and armor, light and heavy. All of those went to the Sabanita Maintenance Facility, where ammunition and equipment awaited them. This included fourteen Ocelots in their configuration as assault guns. So who was to notice that a facility dedicating to fixing, among other things, Ocelots, happened to have some extra Ocelots that only looked like they needed fixing?

Isla Darien
, Balboa Transitway Area, Balboa, Terra Nova

Pililak sat under a tree, rain pouring on her, even so, arms wrapped around her folded knees. She rocked back and forth, weeping. Sometimes she looked up with eyes full of fright like a rabbit on a fox’s menu. Her face was swollen almost beyond recognition. This wasn’t from the tears, but from the hordes of vicious mosquitoes who had acquired and then endlessly satisfied a new found love of Pashtian cuisine. And where was her mosquito net? Somewhere at the bottom of the lake, she supposed.

Her back was in shreds, she knew from touch. She didn’t want to even think about what it looked like.

The thought,
My lord will never want me now, not with the ruin I’ve become,
gave birth to a renewed bout of heartbroken weeping.

She had nothing of her own anymore; all she’d been able to save was her lord’s rifle, and that needed a cleaning she no longer had the equipment for. Saving the rifle had very nearly cost her her life, but she’d far rather have died than lost Iskandr’s arms.

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