Read Helfort's War Book 4: The Battle for Commitment Planet Online

Authors: Graham Sharp Paul

Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Space Opera, #Adventure, #Fiction

Helfort's War Book 4: The Battle for Commitment Planet (34 page)

The uncomfortable silence was broken by Bienefelt’s return. “Come on, you lot,” she said with a beaming smile. “It is the 48th NRA, and they’ve put the coffee on for us.”

Much cheered by the prospect of one of the NRA’s trademark brews, hot and aromatic, Michael climbed to his feet and trudged off after Bienefelt.

   “I’ve spoken to brigade,” the colonel commanding the 48th said. “They want you to make your way to the 120th to link up with the rest of the Feds.”

Michael’s heart soared, buoyed by the prospect of seeing Anna again after so many weeks apart. “Any idea what happens after that, Colonel?” he asked.

“No, sorry. Just that I’m to provide you with an escort and guide to make sure you get there okay. There are still a few Hammers we haven’t accounted for. I can’t spare any recon drones to watch your flanks, so keep your eyes open.”

“Fine, sir. When do we go?”

“Now … Fenech!”

“Sir,” a corporal standing off to one side said, stepping forward smartly.

“Off you go. Don’t lose any.”

“Sir.”

The colonel turned to Michael. “Good luck,” he said, shaking his hand.

“Thanks. You, too.”

Michael started to salute, catching himself just in time. Not a good idea on the battlefield, he reminded himself. Pausing to draw assault rifles, power packs, and ammunition, they set off, Corporal Fenech’s section in a loose screen around them as they moved past the blackened shells of the firebases and defensive positions the Hammers had thrown up in a ring to secure Perdan’s perimeter and entered the outer suburbs proper.

To Michael’s surprise, the first few kilometers showed few signs that a major battle had been fought for Perdan that day. The roads were clear of debris, and there were no barricades or any other sign of organized resistance, the only evidence of combat the odd broken window and occasionally a mobibot damaged by rifle fire. The city was eerily empty, not a single Perdan local in sight, the neat houses that flanked the road silent and dark, not a light visible in the gloom. Where the hell is everybody? Michael wondered.

Fenech pushed on fast—Michael was relieved to see that his patrol was alert, heads swiveling all the time like they were on sticks—and soon proof of the day’s fighting became all too obvious. Must have been when the defenders worked out that they could no longer escape Perdan to the west, toward McNair and safety, Michael realized. The streets were filled with the remains of makeshift barricades, the bodies of dead PGDF troopers and smoke-blackened wrecks of their light armor speaking volumes about the ferocious fighting that must have taken place. Michael’s heart sank when he saw the problem the NRA faced firsthand. Perdan’s suburbs were indefensible: gently rolling terrain, untroubled by creeks or rivers, with broad streets flanked by low buildings set well back. Once Hammer kinetics had reduced Perdan’s outer ring of defenses to smoking ruins, marine heavy armor would roll into town along the
highway from Bretonville in the west and Daleel in the east, unstoppable, any serious NRA resistance blown out of the way by marine ground-attack landers. With marine support, even the PGDF would have little trouble retaking the town, its NRA defenders pushed back and back until they could retreat no more; they would die where they fought.

What the hell were ENCOMM and Vaas thinking?

By the time Fenech led them to the 120th’s positions around Perdan’s southeastern flanks, Michael had seen enough. Without close air support and heavy artillery, Perdan was a lost cause, an objective no guerrilla army could ever hope to hold in the face of conventional forces. Worse, even though the center of Perdan, with its narrower streets and substantial buildings, was a much harder proposition for any attacker, it was far from a natural fortress. Defended by well-motivated troops, it was a tough proposition—all urban warfare was—but not impossible. All it needed was time and an endless, relentless application of Hammer airpower supported by the marines’ heavy armor, and it was all over. To add to the NRA commander’s problems, there was only one way out: back into the Branxtons as they climbed steeply toward the karst plateau to the south. The problem was that when the Hammers launched their final assault on Perdan, even the dumbest Hammer commander would know he had to drop blocking forces to keep the NRA bottled up inside Perdan and where: astride the network of small rivers that cut paths through the densely wooded foothills.

Unless General Vaas had something magical hidden up his sleeve, the NRA would be fighting its way out of Perdan when the end came.

If the tactical nightmare that was Perdan was worrying Corporal Fenech, he did not let it show. “That’s it for me, sir,” he said cheerfully when they reached the shattered remains of a small, low-rise ware house complex beyond which Perdan’s outer suburbs reached out to the forest. “This is 120th’s sector. If you’d wait here, one of the regimental staff will be with you shortly.”

“Thanks, Corporal. Good luck and keep your head down,” Michael said, resisting the urge to comm Anna.

“Trust me, I will,” Fenech said with a broad smile.

Michael and the rest sat down to wait, the minutes dragging by until broken by a familiar voice.

“Well, well, well,” Kallewi said. “Look what the cat’s dragged in. Didn’t expect to see you guys. You all okay?”

“We are.
Widowmaker
’s not, I’m sorry to say. How are you lot?”

“We came through okay. The PGDF put up bit of a fight, but it was halfhearted. We’ve had casualties. Anna’s one of them, I’m afraid.” Michael’s heart came up into his mouth. “No, nothing serious,” Kallewi added hastily when he saw the look on Michael’s face. “She caught a bullet in her upper arm. She’ll be fine.”

“Where is she?”

“Battalion aid station. Follow me. Rest of you, coffee’s that way. Go grab some. I’ll meet you there.”

Michael followed Kallewi through the darkness, picking his way through the chaotic mess of discarded equipment littering the ground around the 120th’s rear positions. Kallewi might think it had not been much of a fight, but it did not look that way. The aid station was tucked away under a chromaflaged canopy pinned to the wall of a badly damaged building. They found Anna sitting propped against a handy block of fallen plasfiber, eyes closed, her face deathly pale in the station’s cool white lights, her bandaged left arm resting on an ammunition box. Michael dropped to his knees alongside her.

“Hello, trooper,” he said softly.

Anna started, her eyes flicking open. For a moment, confusion reigned before she worked out what she was looking at. “Oh, hi, Michael,” she said, her voice slurred.

“What have you been doing?”

“Hammer sonofabitch was a bit too fast for me. I was the better shot, though,” she said, closing her eyes, her mouth twisting into a small crooked smile. “Getting to be a habit, this.”

“What?”

“Hanging around you getting shot. This is the second time, you bastard.”

“Yeah, yeah. Let me see how you are.” Heart pounding, Michael interrogated Anna’s neuronics, relieved to see that she
was okay. The wound to her arm—he winced when Anna commed him images of an ugly, raking gash across her upper arm—looked worse than it was, all her vitals were 100 percent, and when the drugs and shock wore off, she would be sore but fine. Knowing Anna, she would be grumpy, too, but he refused to worry about that now.

“How do you feel?”

“Bit dazed thanks to the medication; Hammer drugs don’t screw around. I’ll be fine. The medics stitched me up and told me to take an hour off, so if you don’t mind.”

Michael did not have time to reply before Anna’s head rolled back and she was asleep.

   “So what’s next?”

Anna, still pale but looking better than when Michael had first set eyes on her, looked at him, puzzled. “You don’t know?” she asked, taking a long pull at her coffee.

It was Michael’s turn to look puzzled. “Know? Know what?”

“Ah, of course, I see the problem,” Anna said. “You lander types didn’t need to know. Operational security and all that.”

“Operational security? About what?”

“I’m not sure you’ve got clearance.”

“Anna!” Michael snapped. “Stop talking in riddles and tell me what the fuck you’re on about. Oh, shit, sorry,” he added. “It’s just … just that I can’t …”

“Look who’s talking in riddles,” Anna said. “Let me guess. You’re not stupid; well, most of the time you’re not, that is.”

“Gee, thanks.”

“Don’t mention it, spacer. Anyway, I take it you’ve worked out that a hut in the middle of the desert would be easier to defend than Perdan. Am I right?”

Michael nodded. “I had, and it’s been bothering me. The thought of you trapped here …” His voice trailed off.

“You are such an idiot, Michael Helfort.”

“Me? Why?”

“Well, for not having faith in ENCOMM, that’s why. I know they’ll throw troopers at the Hammers, but the sacrifice has to be justified by the payoff, so trying to hold on to a town like this … well, Vaas and his staff aren’t that dumb.”

“They’re not? What happened to all that ‘hold at all costs’ stuff they included in our briefing?”

Anna snorted. “Window dressing.”

“Had us fooled,” Michael muttered.

“Can’t be helped; it was meant to, and if it convinces the Hammers, fooling a dim-witted Fed flyboy will have been well worth it.”

Michael did not know whether to laugh or scream, so he contented himself with a stern look. “Anna! Tell me what the plan is or I’ll … I’ll …”

“What, flyboy? What will you do?” Anna said, her face lit by a mischievous grin. “Do tell.”

“Anna, please,” Michael said, trying with no success to keep the pleading out of his voice. “I hate it when you do this to me. Come on! I’ve been worried sick about you.”

“Okay, okay. Simple fact is we’re not staying here. We’re not going to try to hold Perdan.”

“What? You’re not?”

“No, we’re not. See them over there?” she said, pointing at a small collection of plasfiber crates.

“Yeah. Mortar rounds, judging from their markings. So?”

“They’re not what they seem. Each one of those holds a nasty little NRA invention. They call it the area denial weapon, ADW for short.”

“Never heard of it.”

“Nor had we until last week. Here, let me send you some vid. It shows one in action.”

Half closing his eyes, Michael ran the vid Anna commed him. The clip started with a close-up shot of what looked like a large beach ball, its silver skin marred by mounting brackets and junction boxes sprouting a mix of power and data cables. It looked familiar, but try as he might, Michael could not work out what it was. Four pairs of hands reached into frame and, with an obvious effort, lifted the ball bodily and dropped it onto a foamalloy insert inside a case. A pair of hands connected a cluster of wires coming from a small gray box mounted inside the case to wires from the beach ball, then put a foam-padded lid in place. The image pulled back to a long shot as the handlers withdrew; Michael now saw that the box was sitting
alone in a small clearing surrounded by trees. A voice started a countdown. At zero, the holocam shook violently, overwhelmed by a savage flash of white. When vision returned, Michael was shocked to see the results: For hundreds of meters all around, trees had been stripped of their leaves, trunks flayed back to bare wood, smaller branches torn off and hurled outward.

“Holy shit,” Michael said, stunned. “What is that?”

“Neat, eh? That, my flyboy friend, was a microfusion plant stripped out of a truckbot. Impressive, eh?”

“You’re kidding me!”

“No, I’m not. Hammers must have been confused, wondering why so many truckbots have been stolen in the last few months.”

“How the hell were they shipped in? You can’t backpack them in. They weigh a ton.” Something clicked. “Oh, shit,” he said. “Don’t tell me. Those containers we brought in this morning. They weren’t … Tell me
Widowmaker
hasn’t airlifted in tons of stolen mobibot microfusion plants. Please tell me.”

“Yeah, you did.” Anna grinned and nodded her head. “You’re not so dumb, after all.”

Michael’s head went down. “Oh,” was all he could say.

There was a long silence while Michael struggled to decide whether to be angry at the NRA’s deceit or impressed by its ingenuity. Since he and the rest of
Widowmaker
’s crew had survived—how he had no idea; the Hammers had a relaxed attitude to safety, and their truckbot engineering was a good fifty years behind the Fed’s—he picked the latter.

“I think I get it now,” he said at last. “Perdan is seeded with the nasty little fuckers, especially around the airport. Meanwhile, convinced that the NRA will fight to the death, the Hammers scrape together all the troops and armor they can lay their hands on. Just before they attack, the NRA sneaks away, leaving behind some brave sucker to fire the ADWs. The Hammers discover Perdan is theirs, walk in, put landers down after their combat engineers have made sure the city isn’t littered with claymores—nobody would think to worry about old mortar boxes—and then, while they are all standing around scratching their nuts, wondering what the hell the NRA was playing
at … bingo. Up go the ADWs, taking with them the best part of the Perdan relief force.”

“There you are,” Anna said. “I keep telling everyone you’re not as dumb as you look!”

“You are a heartless bitch, Lieutenant Anna Helfort.”

“Respect, flyboy, respect. Trooper Anna Cheung Helfort, please.”

“Sorry,” Michael said.

“Come on, help me up here. Once I’ve checked in with the medics, I need to get back. Don’t want my section leader thinking I’m loafing.”

   Late that night, Michael lay alongside Anna, the pair of them curled under her chromaflage cape, incessant rain driving cold out of an overcast sky, fingers of water worming their way past his defenses to soak into his clothes. It was miserable, and Michael would not have swapped it for anything.

For the umpteenth time, he wondered about ENCOMM’s plan for Perdan. If the deception held, the NRA was going to hand the Hammers their bloodiest defeat ever. It was a breath-takingly ambitious plan, and Michael prayed with every fiber of his body that it worked.

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