Read Come and Take Them-eARC Online
Authors: Tom Kratman
Tags: #Military, #Science Fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction
“Yeah, but they can’t attack much longer either, sir. But…well…we’re down to less than a magazine per man.”
Porras nodded agreement. He spoke in a voice no louder than his collapsing lung permitted, “Pass the word, Top. Fix Bayonets! Pass it loud. Let the bloody Gauls hear.”
Cruz smiled what he fully expected would be his last smile. “Maniple…Fix! Bayonets!” He reached to unsnap his own bayonet.
* * *
In the relatively open area here there wasn’t nearly as much reason to keep the infantry in the fight. The bulk of the killing, on both sides, was being done by the armor, Puma Tanks, SPATHA tank destroyers, and Ocelots, on the one side, Roland tanks and ARE-12P infantry fighting vehicles on the other.
With real surprise lost, the fight had been much more even. Meter by meter, the rest of the 420th had pushed the Balboans back. Both sides had paid dearly, the Taurans for every meter gained, the Balboans for each minute.
Against the frontal armor of the Tauran tanks the main guns of the Pumas
proved useless, although a lucky side shot had left a sixty-ton behemoth dead in the road. Even less effective were the 100mm guns of the Ocelots. Only the “demo guns” of the SPATHAs had been able to deal with the frontal armor of the Rolands. Better said, they had proven able to smash the crews; the armor remained mostly intact. In all, five Rolands had been left, burned out or smashed hulks. All twelve pieces of the Second Cohort’s little armored force that had made it to the vicinity of the fighting had paid the ultimate price for those kills.
With the Balboan armor crushed, the Rolands had pushed on alone. The IFVs were too lightly armored to risk keeping up. So, when the Taurans had closed to within range of Porras’s infantry, the recoilless guns and RGL launchers had had their own fight of it. The tanks had won, but at the cost of two more of their number—one to a mine, another to a side shot from an RGL. Porras’s infantry had paid a higher price—a dozen men dead or wounded, but the tanks had pulled back, calling for the infantry to take the lead in the tightening terrain.
Under cover of the remaining tanks’ fire, the Tauran infantry had cut left and right, one company each going after the platoons the maniple commander had pushed up to support Porras on his left and right. In vicious close fighting they had driven the Balboans back from one hastily chosen defensive position to another. Still, each mechanized infantry company could dismount no more than sixty foot soldiers. The lonely grunts had bled equally along with the Balboans once outside of covering fire from their IFVs.
They had bled so much, in fact, that a further advance was almost impossible. Still, they were Gauls and, as such, they were willing to try.
The Tunnel,
Cerro Mina,
Balboa, Terra Nova
Inside, inside where it couldn’t be seen, Janier bled with his troops.
And that surprised me more than anything. I thought I was above all that silly sentimentality. Does this carnage bother Carrera, I wonder? Do people mean anything to him? I’ll be they do. I’ll bet he bleeds as I do.
“General,” said Malcoeur, “it’s the Union Security Council, in the form of Monsieur Gaymard.”
“Janier, here,” said the general, after taking the ancient black phone. “No, sir, it isn’t possible to defeat the Balboans with the force I have on hand here. It isn’t possible to defend the Transitway with the forces I have here.… No, sir, I don’t think the Balboans intend to attack the Transitway, unless we escalate the fighting.… I didn’t give air support to the soldiers engaged because I had reason to believe that Arnold Air Force Base would have been shelled to ruin if the Balboan commander had been told we were getting ready to do so.… Yes, they did shell Brookings rather badly.… If you will recall, sir, I asked for two aircraft carriers to support us before we started the Green Monsoons again.… Monsieur, the Balboans had aircraft in the air and didn’t use them to support their troops.… Mr. President, it was on
your
orders, yours and the rest of the Council’s, that I began the provocations again.… Yes, sir, I do have copies of those orders.… No, sir, I will
not
destroy them.… Of
course
you didn’t mean to suggest anything illegal, sir.
…“No, it’s not possible…I have eleven maneuver battalions in Balboa now. One is practically destroyed. One is scattered across the Jungle School and can’t be collected for some hours yet. One is a commando battalion uniquely ill-suited for heavy combat. For the remaining eight there are another twenty uncommitted battalions of Balboans mobilized and ready to fight immediately. There could be another fifteen here in a matter of hours; at most a day. And against my four battalions of artillery I am facing the equivalent of fifteen or twenty from Balboa immediately, thirty or forty in time.… Yes, I think that’s right. If we escalate the fighting we
will
lose, badly. No, ‘badly’ isn’t strong enough. We’ll lose stinking. I think the Balboans have proven they can and will fight, sir.… Yes, sir. It
is
a pity they’re not like the Sumeris.… No, sir. If you try to send me reinforcements from the Tauran Union in any form I will be ass deep in the Transitway before they get here. Our plan was only good if the Balboans were not mobilized. They are certainly mobilized now.
“Very well, Monsieur. I will order the 420th Dragoons to withdraw to base.”
Roughly halfway between Balboa City Train Station and
Avenida de la Santa Maria, Ciudad
Balboa, Balboa, Terra Nova
“This Second Platoon, Second Company?” asked a dirt smudged senior centurion. In the dim light he didn’t recognize either Cruz or the unconscious Porras, lying beside him. Unable to speak at the moment, Cruz just nodded his head. A rifle with a blood-stained bayonet lay across his legs, the bayonet beginning to shine a faint pink by the light of the just rising sun.
“Sergeant Major,” asked the centurion, incredulously, “is that
you
?”
Again, Cruz could only nod.
“Sorry we took so long, Sergeant Major. Had to help this maniple’s first platoon before coming here. Their CO’s hit, but he’s going to make it. We’ll pass through you and move to contact as far as the boundary. There’s ambulances coming for your wounded…and the Taurans.”
“Good…good,” answered Cruz.
The centurion said, “Hell of a job these guys did,
hell
of a job. How many they got left?”
“Twelve that I can count,” answered Cruz.
“‘Second to None’” quoted the other centurion. Then he gestured for his men to advance.
Tauran News Network, Headline News Studios, Lumière, Gaul, Terra Nova
“General Bigeard, what does this all mean?” asked the vapid faced host.
“It
means
,” answered the retired Gallic four star, aged, bald, with just a thin patina of the strength and force that had once carried him to the top, “that we can’t have our way in Balboa any longer. It means that the Tauran Union has actually lost its first and only battle in history. It
means
that any pretense to Balboa needing us to defend the Transitway is just that, a pretense. It means that the pernicious safety constraints imposed on all Tauran armed forces by Marine R.E.S. Mors du Char the Fourth have come to fruition. We can’t fight anymore.
“On the other hand,” continued Bigeard. “They can obviously fight on their own.”
The host turned to face the camera. “For those of you just joining us, as you may have heard already, serious fighting broke out between Balboa and the Tauran Union about six hours ago. It cannot yet be ascertained whether this will result in general hostilities, but word on Tauran casualties suggests that they are
very
heavy, at least eighty Tauran soldiers have been killed, a larger number wounded in action. Balboan losses are said to be heavier still. I have with me General Marc Bigeard, one time Chief of Staff of the Army of the Gallic Republic.”
The talking head returned his attention to the retired old soldier. “General, what do you make of the videotape we saw a few moments ago that shows Tauran soldiers opening fire first?”
“The tape,” Bigeard pointed out, “only speaks partly for itself. A lot of questions remain unanswered: Why did our soldiers open fire? What were so many Balboan soldiers doing in that place and time? Perhaps most importantly, why were Tauran soldiers sent in harms’ way if the Tauran Union was not prepared to support them? The Tauran Union Security Council has much to answer for.”
Cerro Mina
Inn,
Ciudad
Balboa, Balboa, Terra Nova
Carrera walked solemnly among the wounded being cared for on the floor of the brothel. Chin and Second Cohort’s Commander, Velasquez, met him and reported.
“How badly off, are you, Velasquez?” Carrera asked of the cohort commander.
“Bad,
Duque,
” Velasquez replied. “My cohort’s been hurt badly.” He gulped before speaking further. “We know we’ve got, maybe, a hundred and thirty, maybe a hundred and forty dead. I think another twenty or thirty are going to die. Wounded? Damn near everybody in First and Second Maniples to one degree or another.… But…we held ’em, sir. We held ’em.”
“The Taurans?”
Chin answered, “We’ve recovered a hundred and twelve bodies, last I checked. We’ve also got about sixty prisoners. Almost
all
of them are wounded. They’re being cared for along with our own. Then there are some
things,
piles of ashes, in some of the tracks, that might be…probably are…Gallic troops.”
Carrera nodded understanding. “Okay. You and your men were splendid, Velasquez. You may have even bought us peace.” Carrera reached into a pocket and pulled out a set of insignia for the next higher step in rank. He handed them to Velasquez and said, “Put these on,
Legate
…
Permanently.
And tell your boys, what’s left of them, that the men of Second Cohort, Second Tercio, who fought here today, plus all of their attachments, are to assume their full, mobilization level-three ranks, when on duty, until they retire or are discharged. We’ll work up a citation for the unit in the next few days. Now you have things to do. Go do them.”
Velasquez saluted and was turning to go when Carrera stopped him again. “One other thing. Two-Two will not die. Whatever it takes to rebuild your tremendous cohort so it can continue to serve the Republic will be done.”
“Thank you, sir.” Velasquez left.
Carrera shook hands with Chin and left the building. Lourdes had been waiting with Soult outside. He joined her there. She had wanted to go inside but could not bring herself to do so. The cries of pain were just too horrible.
Followed by three radios and a half dozen guards, Carrera and his wife walked south toward Balboa City’s Central Avenue. Wounded were being treated and dead collected there, with Second Cohort’s Medical Platoon centurion, aided by a doctor from the tercio medical company, overseeing the evacuations.
Carrera’s first impulse was to walk to the wounded. However another scene caught his eye. A woman, no longer young, was searching for someone. A soldier lifted the poncho from the face of one corpse after another. At each the old woman shook her head. Finally, the soldier pulled a poncho from the particular face for which she had been searching. Putting her hands to her face, the woman fell to her knees and buried her face against the blood-stained chest of her only son, her hope for the future. Her body shook with sobs. If she cried aloud, the sound was muffled by her son’s body.
Carrera turned from his intended path to go to the woman’s side. He let her cry a while longer, then, together with the soldier, he pulled her to her feet. Wrapping the old woman in a hug, he heard her ask, over and over “Why? Why?”
Because of me, Old Mother. Only because of me. Your son? I feel no pity for him, he is past all pain. If anything, I feel a certain envy. All my sympathy is for you, left alone in the world as I was once left alone. Mourn, that is proper. But don’t fear. I will take care of you. Or, rather, my Balboa will.
Part V
Chapter Thirty-two
Days of quiet for us have come now,
Day of learning and of work.
So that calmly, quietly will bloom
Our villages and towns…
Soldiers on the march, the march, the march
And for you your own field mail is waiting
But hark the trumpet calls
And soldiers march on.
—“Soldat y’ve put,” Volgan Traditional
Palacio de las
Trixies
,
Ciudad
Balboa, Republic of Balboa, Terra Nova
It was evening, with a pleasant breeze blowing from off the
Mar Furioso
. The presidential palace was quiet for the nonce as the trixies had left the roost for a while, hunting
antaniae
. To Parilla, Carrera seemed exhausted, and not from the post adrenaline let down after the battle with the Taurans. No, his exhaustion seemed to go all the way to the soul.
My friend,
thought Parilla,
is in serious need of a break.
Damn,
thought Carrera,
I
so
need to take a couple of weeks…or months…or years mostly off.
“You, my friend, are one lucky bastard,” said
Presidente
Parilla. “So are all of us.”
“How’s that?” asked Carrera. Before Parilla answered he chugged down a good three fingers worth of sipping rum then reach for the bottle to add more.
“No war. The shocked-ever-so-silly Taurans are going to give up on trying to get rid of us.”
Carrera shrugged. “War might have broken out, it’s true. But only if the Tauran Union had been of a single mind. Fortunately, the Tauran Union has
never
—‘What, never? No, never!’—been of a single mind in its history, to date.
“Among conservative circles there was a strong feeling that nothing in Balboa—or anywhere in the world that had no oil reserves or rare metals—was worth a drop of Tauran sweat, to say nothing of Tauran blood. Revenge did not seem like a good enough reason to go to war when it
did
appear—good old Fernandez and his man with the camera!—that we had only been defending our own country.”
Carrera then sneered, more or less by instinct. “More liberal groups were more radically split. Some—the remnants of those who hated their own countries and cultures so much that they had once thought it a fine thing to support any guerrilla or terrorist movement so long as its aims were anti-Tauran or anti-Federated States—cheered what they saw as a defeat of Tauran arms. Others, and I find these the more respectable by far, mourned any loss of life, Tauran or Balboan, or just plain old human, for that matter. Of course, revenge was a completely inadequate reason for any of these to want war.
“Then there are our own sorts, Latins living in the Tauran Union. They were torn between patriotism for their adopted countries and a certain cultural pride. I understand there were refugees from Tsarist Marxism, who totally hated Marxism in all its versions, who—Zhong or Cochinese or Uhuran—were still full of pride when their former peoples beat Taurans and South Columbians.
“You know,” observed the president, “that the Tauran Union has renounced neither its stated right to intervene in Balboa, nor to maintain bases on Balboan soil in perpetuity, nor to avoid provoking the legion.”
“They’ll get sick of staying,” Carrera said. “A riot here, a riot there…their own people pushing to get them to leave…and our budget to support those people isn’t even especially high. They’ll be gone in time and instead of losing twenty or thirty or forty thousand fine young men, and some women, too, of course, we got off with a few hundred dead and wounded.”
“There are still some major issues,” said the president. “The drachma embargo remains in place…”
“Sure,” Carrera agreed, “in theory. But—years after unsuccessful years of trying to break us that way, our people and theirs always find a way around it. I don’t think the Taurans even try to prevent it anymore.” Carrera snorted, mirthfully. “Hell, if anything, the drachma embargo makes your government more popular than ever.”
“Yes, I suspect it does,” said Parilla. “It’s also gotten us sympathy to help us form mutual defense treaties with half of the other states of Colombia del Norte.”
“That’s even better at the moment,” said Carrera. “You need to lean on the diplomatic folks because the rest, maybe minus Santa Josefina, should be joining us very soon, too. After several hundred years of outrageously pushy and arrogant Tauran imperialism, there are pro-Balboa demonstrations in the streets from la Plata to Atzlan.”
“Hmmm…” Parilla mused on the prospect of killing a couple of birds with one stone. “Why don’t you and the wife take a tour? You can see some sights about this part of the world, while standing in as a national symbol in those countries sympathetic to us.”
“Maybe…just maybe,” agreed the
Duque.
“I hear they’re pulling Janier out?” said Parilla.
“Yeah,” Carrera agreed. “Fernandez passed that to me, too; kicking Janier upstairs to some caretaker position, maybe, or maybe putting him in as Chief of Staff to the new Tauran Union Combined Staff. I’ll be interested in seeing who they appoint here to take his place.”
* * *
Carrera and Lourdes did take their vacation, while from his end Parilla pushed for a mutual defense treaty with all of the other states of Colombia Latina. There was already a treaty with many, but Balboa needed more. True, it was something of a rush job but in the general euphoria over Latin troops holding their own against Taurans, the treaty was ratified everywhere but Santa Josefina, where President Calderón refused to submit it to the legislature, and Cienfuegos which, as one of the last Tsarist-Marxist states on the planet, found Balboa’s timocracy loathsome in the extreme.
Why it passed so easily everywhere else was a matter of some conjecture. Some said it was pride. Others fear. A few cynics maintained that the rest of Colombia Latina signed on only because there was so little prospect, after the battle, of actually having to fight Taurus.
The key points of the treaty, from Balboa’s perspective, were that specific military organizations from other Latin states were identified for defense of the Transitway. Atzlan, for example, pledged its Parachute Brigade and committed to rotating its battalions through Balboa, one for a few months every year to train with the legion. Lempira and Valdivia offered highly trained battalions of mountain troops, one each. La Plata offered a regiment of Marines as did its Portuguese-speaking rival to its south. Other states offered battalions of infantry as they were able, twelve in all. To help ensure quality, Balboa began to supplement training for these units; some in their own countries, others with training rotations at the training center in Balboa’s
Fuerte
Cameron. Balboan military schools, including Cazador School, were opened up rather liberally to allied Latin states.
Four extra tercio headquarters, Fortieth through Forty-third, were authorized and raised. These took over the training and partial support of the twelve miscellaneous Latin battalions under their wings. Fifth Tercio did the same for the mountain troops. In assigning allied Latin battalions to the headquarters, great care was taken to keep traditional enemies and rivals apart. Thus, for example, one newly formed allied tercio
had troops from La Plata, Pizarro, and Bolivar, but certainly none from Valdivia and definitely no one who spoke Portuguese. And for the battalions from Colombia Central, one had to be most careful not to put Lempirans and their neighbors together. Since everyone in Colombia del Sur detested Stroessnerns, they were meshed with two battalions from Colombia Central.
The service support and combat support troops the new tercios would need were raised in Balboa itself, although in three different ways. Additional maniples were authorized in the already existing service support tercios of the legion, as a whole. The combat support tercios of the brigade, legions, and corps which would receive the foreign troops also added maniples. The artillery already existed in the artillery tercios of the legion.
There was also a brigade of Sumeri Presidential Guard promised by Adnan Sada, but that was a personal agreement between him and Carrera, and not a matter of treaty or diplomacy.
Despite the expense, and it was not small, of raising those new troops and supplementing the training of the foreign units, Carrera was able to cut back on military expenses to a significant degree. The primary reason for that was that, except for the Megalodon class coastal defense submarines, and the Condors—which were still coming off the local assembly lines and slipways—plus ammunition for training, Carrera had already bought and stored almost all of the equipment and supplies he believed he needed to defend the country. It had cost many billions and had a limited useful life span, but he was able—for a time—to sharply reduce capital expenditures.
There followed what was probably the greatest surge in the Balboan economy since the FSC had gone home after their invasion and the government had been able to sell off abandoned real estate to insiders. With massive investment in the economy made possible by the Cristobal Free Zone Tax, drug lords’ tribute, various sources of foreign aid, some of it somewhat reluctantly given, unemployment nationwide dropped to the lowest level in Latin Columbia. Among veterans and volunteers, some ten percent of the population, unemployment was almost precisely nothing. The exceptions were the very few; rich members of the legion, and there were some, and the rather larger number going to school full time. And those last weren’t precisely unemployed. Carrera’s enterprises were also able to increase Balboa’s exports to a healthy degree; lumber, scrap steel, canned food, clothing, footwear, minor electronics, weapons, ammunition, and other goods flowed from Balboa as far north as La Plata and as far south as Secordia. Some also went to Uhuru, Taurania, and the island country of Wellington.
Although “trickle down economics” garnered much scorn in most of the planet’s progressive circles, it seemed to work well enough in Balboa. In part this was because most of the money spent by Carrera and the legion went into common people’s pockets where it was reasonably sure to be spent, almost always on something that would help another Balboan stay employed. The rest was because the average resident of Balboa expected, and received, so little of his or her government in the way of social benefits that the policy caused no reduction in government income and no loss to already nonexistent income redistribution programs. The government had little in direct tax revenues to redistribute in any event.
Tourism—the Transitway was still a big draw—enjoyed something of a renaissance as well. After all, Balboa City was cheaper, warmer, cleaner, more cosmopolitan, and—especially for older and wealthier tourists—safer than anyplace else they were likely to find. Moreover, English was widely spoken. Only the capital of Cienfuegos could boast an equal degree of safety…but that capital, Batabanó, was almost entirely run down after decades of embargo and Tsarist-Marxist misrule and economic mismanagement. Also, and unlike Balboa, no appreciable percentage of the worlds’ commerce, in fact, none of it, actually
had
to pass through Cienfuegos.
Of course, that safety came at a price. The domestic criminal code of Balboa, it was said, was written in blood, not ink. And that whole thing about cruel and unusual punishments being bad things? Yeah, completely lost on the Balboan Senate.
On the other hand, freedom of religion, the right of free
peaceful
assembly—indeed, most of the rights once enshrined in a constitution of a long disappeared major state on Old Earth—were respected scrupulously, albeit under interpretations that Thomas Jefferson would have found more understandable than did the Federated States Supreme Court. And with over a third of a million fully automatic weapons in the hands of individuals, gun control would have been something of a joke.
Freedom of the press was more problematic. The legion had always taken a dim view of people who used their position as journalists to fight for, spy or scout for, or serve as propagandists for, the other side. This had been true in Sumer, in Pashtia, in La Palma Province, and was still true in the country as a whole.
Several reporters—local and international—had been shot or hanged for espionage or some other infraction before the rest took the hint. The actual rule was quite simple: “Look at anything you want that you can get physical access to (most facilities were well guarded); report what you wish; but give up the smallest scrap of militarily valuable information, or demonstrate that you’re working for our enemies and you
become
the enemy…and go before a firing squad or to the hangman if we can catch you. And we’ll certainly try.”
Mostly the media contented itself with reporting the allegedly widespread dissatisfaction with Balboa’s government. In fact, such dissatisfaction
was
fairly widespread among certain elements of the population. At another level of society, however, among people who had well-paying jobs—by Balboan standards—and hope for a better future for the first time in memory, it was said that with Parilla there was no freedom to starve…unless one really wanted to.
Still, a small community of Balboan expatriates grew up around the capital of Hamilton in the Federated States of Columbia. A hundred or so of these were disgruntled police cast off by Carrera in the years after the attempted coup by the late (crucified) Legate Pigna. These tended to look to Endara-Rocaberti as their natural leader and spokesman. They were also obvious enough to attract the attention of the high admiral, from her perch aboard the
Spirit of Peace.
Wallenstein could hardly help take note of a minor crisis, involving the press. This came about when, in accordance with established Tauran and Federated States jurisprudence concerning jurisdiction, a bound and gagged Wally Barker was deposited on the doorstep of the criminal court building in
Ciudad
Balboa. Mr. Barker had been kidnapped by a team from the Fourteenth Cazador Tercio
while he was on vacation in Atzlan, allegedly with the aid of the Atzlan Brigade of
Paracaidistas
. The Supreme Court of Balboa, taking its cue from the Tauran Union’s Supreme Court, determined that it was not its business precisely
how
the weasel reporter had arrived in Balboa. He
was
in Balboa and the Court had jurisdiction.