Authors: Chris Bunch; Allan Cole
They were in the trap.
Sarsfield ordered the artillery to open up. His own cannon and surface-to-surface launchers opened up on predetermined targets, targets that were now obscured by enemy vehicles.
The tacships were launched from the mother ships, which were grounded near the huge park back of the embassy, where Sten had ordered the transports grounded.
Drakh-hot pilot Hannelore La Ciotat popped her tacship up, saw the track platoon's cannon begin to swivel, blasted a volley of rockets from the rack jury-rigged on her ship's belly, ran two cases through her forward chain gun, and disappeared.
La Ciotat was swearing almost continuously. Clot. She might as well have joined the clotting
infantry
. She gunned her tacship down a street, well below the building roofs, looking for another target.
The platoon was destroyed—and the momentum of the attack temporarily broken.
But they kept coming.
The Jochi armor-infantry Combat Command moved swiftly and efficiently toward the city center. It was a highly trained force on familiar ground. The tracks would hit anything the infantry couldn't, and the grunts kept antitank gunners from killing their big friends.
"Battery A… fire!" and the four Imperial gravsleds appeared to explode. Each explosion was, in fact, forty-eight rockets salvoed from the racks mounted on the gravsleds' rear. The unarmored sleds lifted at full speed and headed for another location.
The rockets were just that—propellant, guidance vanes, and warhead. Their accuracy was plus-minus fifty meters at four hundred meters. Appallingly bad. But when 192 rockets, each with fifty kilos of explosive in its warhead, simultaneously impact on an area one hundred meters on a side, and that area is occupied by a crack armor-infantry unit, the results can be impressive.
The Jochi infantry died to a man.
A few of the tracks had been hit and crippled. But most of them were still combat-capable.
Then the two-man antitrack teams rose out of their hiding places in the rubble, fire-and-forget missiles streaking fire.
But the Confederation kept coming.
The skies were black, and there were high, building storm clouds in the distance.
Kilgour wiped sweat from his forehead. "Th' weather'll break, noo, an' we'll lose th' wee tacships."
Cind grimaced. The ships had all-weather capability. But no one had ever meant that to mean a spacecraft could fly in the heart of a city, fight an enemy on the ground, which meant with mostly visual target acquisitions, and not spend a lot of time revamping the local architecture.
Or, if the architecture was as solid as on Rurik, crashing.
Seconds later the storm broke, huge raindrops shattering down. Kilgour swore, ducking for shelter that wasn't there, and then his language went doubly purple as hailstones spattered him.
Clottin' wonderful, he thought. Tis nae enow we hae th' hands ae all men agin us here, nae t' mention a few ETs, but th' weathergods hae us on the list ae well.
Warrant Officer La Ciotat stood beside her tacship, oblivious to the rain spattering in through the
Victory's
open hangar doors. The ship was grounded just behind the embassy, and the other tacship carrier, the
Bennington
, nearby.
"Sir. I'm willing to try it," she argued. "We'll just use the Kali sensors out the front of the launch tube, and I'll go on instruments and get targets from the missile."
"Negative," her flight commander ordered. "We're grounded. We'll be pulling drive offworld next.
"Or if not, we're
really
going to be making kamikaze runs, instead of just getting close like you want. That's an order."
"I have reports," Sarsfield said, tonelessly, "that my artillerymen are firing sabot charges over open sights. They're getting close, Sten."
"Tell them to blow their guns and move to the transports."
"Yessir."
"What's the loading status?"
Sarsfield consulted with an aide.
"I have all battalions loaded, except the one boarding now, and the First Battalion in its defensive position back of the square. Plus the arty batteries that are hauling for the ships right now.
"I guess," Sarsfield said, "the First will have to fight the rear guard action. Clot. At least," he said sadly, "they volunteered for it." As had every other battalion of the First Guards, Sten knew.
"All embassy personnel are loaded," Sten said. "As ordered, you are to lift all Imperial ships when First Battalion has the attacking units engaged and counterattacks. The
Victory
will hold on the ground until the last possible moment for pickup for any Guards elements that can disengage after you lift. I'm shutting down this station now."
"Roger you're last. You're transferring now to the
Victory
!"
"Negative," Sten said. "I'll be with First Battalion. Sten. Out."
Sarsfield had not even time to register his protest. Sten stood, stiff muscles stretching, and reached for his combat harness.
Alex, similarly outfitted for battle, held it ready. They went for the stairs. Kilgour turned and pulled a wire, then they went on up toward the ground floor.
Ten seconds later explosives shattered the coms and conference room.
"Y' hae a plan," Kilgour wondered.
"Sure," Sten said. "Many, many plans. To pray for peace. To not get killed. To make it to the
Victory
before she hauls. To break contact at nightfall, and exfiltrate into the country and go to ground."
"An' how long d'ye think," Kilgour wondered, "thae clottin' Emperor'll take t' send a rescue party f'r a man who disobeyed orders?"
"Have faith, Alex," Sten said. "Sooner or later, we'll just learn to levitate home."
In the courtyard Sten saw Cind, the Gurkhas, and the Bhor drawn up. Waiting.
He wasn't surprised.
But he almost started crying.
Cind saluted him, rain dripping from her nose.
He returned the salute, and his pissant little formation doubled off—up the wide boulevard toward the Square of the Khaqans to join the last stand.
Fleet Admiral Mason glowered at the screen, which showed the Jochi system rushing toward him. This whole assignment has been clotted, he thought.
First I am chauffeur to that popinjay Sten on that clotting yacht he was given. Then I spend time dancing around playing peep-bo and now you see it, now you don't with a bunch of geeks and ETs.
Hither, yon, hither yon, and it is all shadows, just like I told Sten, back on Prime, a world where everything is gray and there is no truth.
He deserved better from the Eternal Emperor, he thought furiously. And wondered how, once this disaster wound to a close, he could remind his Emperor of that.
At least there will be no relief and court-martial, as happened to Mahoney for some reason, he thought. I have followed my orders exactly.
And a soldier cannot go wrong when he does that.
"Jochi planetfall… two E-hours," his watch officer said.
The Altaic soldiers moved confidently into the Square of the Khaqans. Opposition had lightened, and then disappeared. Now they would take the palace, and move on to destroy unutterably the hated Imperials.
A cheer rose. This was the center, was the throne. From this place, all power came. Now—and each soldier's thoughts differed, depending on his race—the rulers of the Altaic Cluster would be different.
The counterattack struck.
The multiple rocket racks had been dismounted from the grav-lighters and concealed behind balustrades, terraces, and even statues. Firing studs were touched, and the rockets crashed out, ripping horizontally across the square.
Explosions shattered and echoed, and then the First Battalion counterattacked, rolling up the Altaic soldiers and sending them reeling back.
Bare seconds later, more thunder crashed. But this was not from the storm or from the Guards' rocketry.
Fire blazoned into the darkness that was technically day as the Imperial transports lifted clear of the park and drove at full power for space.
Sten watched them disappear into the storm clouds. Very good. Very good, he thought. Better than Cavite.
Now let's see if there's any way to save my own young ass.
* * *
The rain was slamming in now, wind-driven, and thunder was crashing as the wind roared across the great square in front of Cind.
She was stretched prone, using a projectile-chipped staircase for cover, and paid no mind to the puddle she was lying in, the puddle that was scarlet from the blood draining from the Guardsman next to her.
Her own rifle lay beside her, disregarded.
A precision sniper weapon was no use here. Far across the square, which was littered with crashed gravlighters and destroyed tracks, fire flickering from their hatches in spite of the storm, the Confederation Forces were getting ready for another assault.
Time had passed. How much time, she didn't know.
The enemy had reformed and attacked.
They tried first with armor—but Guardsmen with AT weapons were stationed in the upper floors of the palace, firing down into the always-vulnerable top deck of the tracks.
Then fast gravlighters swept forward, trying to punch through the increasingly thin lines of the Guardsmen. They were stopped.
Next the Confederation began human wave attacks. Shoulder to shoulder infantry attacks, men and women shouting cheers and marching bravely, suicidally, into the near-solid gunfire.
They died—but so did Imperial Guardsmen.
She had seen Alex cursing and putting a field dressing on a bloody, if superficial, shrapnel wound on his upper leg before he had gone back to the slaughter. Otho, too, had been hit. But after his wounds had been dressed, he had returned to the line, spotting for a Guards' mortar crew.
Cind wondered if they could stand two, three, or just one more assault before that wave washed over them.
There had been no opportunity to break contact and try for the
Victory
, assuming the ship was still on the ground.
Sten splashed down beside her.
The two of them were grimy. Bloody—but at least the blood was not their own. Their eyes were glaring.
"Well?"
"Two tubes left, boss."
"Here." He passed her another magazine of AM2 rounds.
"Be melodramatic," she suggested. "Kiss me."
Sten grimaced, started to obey, and then jerked back as he heard the grind of oncoming tracks once more. "Well, I shall be clotted. Look."
This time the attack was combined armor and infantry. And, standing in that lead track was…
Cind grabbed her exotic rifle and sighted. She saw the handsome face and silver hair. "It's him! You want the privilege?"
"Go ahead. I've had all the fun lately."
The man in the track was General Douw. Cind supposed he thought this would be the final attack that would overrun the Imperial Forces, and had chosen to lead it himself.
Brave.
Brave, but dumb, Cind thought as she touched the trigger and the AM2 round blew Douw's chest apart.
"Thank you," Sten said.
Cind scrabbled for the willygun. The death of their leader hadn't even been noticed by the oncoming soldiers.
Wave after wave of them poured into the square. Cind swept their ranks—then decided to wait until they were closer.
She lifted her head to see—and her eyes widened.
"Jamchyyd and Kholeric," she whispered, her tone wholly reverent, actually calling on the Bhor gods as if she believed they might exist. "Sarla and Laraz."
Coming over the city's rooftops, swaying like a great dark snake, came the cyclone, cutting a solid swath as it came. And behind the first funnel cloud… another. One… two… Cind counted six of them, swinging back and forth like a dancer's hips as they came.
Sten remembered: "…
kill a thousand people in forty minutes… punch a blade of straw through an anvil… throw five tacships… a quarter klick
…"
The tornadoes picked up debris as they came. A roof. A shed. A gravsled. A personnel carrier. A crashed tacship. A man. Spun them, ruined them, broke them beyond recognition, and then used them as weapons.
Cind's ears cracked, and she swallowed.
The roar was louder now than the gunfire, and the Altaic troops stopped. They turned—and saw the cyclones.
Then the first vortex entered the Square of the Khaqans.
It swept through the soldiers and their weapons like a vacuum cleaner picking up dust balls. It picked them up and cast them aside.
Sten was on his feet.
Shouting. Screaming. Unheard.
He was waving—back. Back—away. For the
Victory
!
The second tornado entered the square. Both funnel clouds twisted and spun, hesitating, as if unsure if they should continue.
Imperial soldiers pelted away from this new demon that no one could be expected to stand against.
But they were not in panic. They ran—but slowly, helping the limping walking wounded. Bringing their weapons with them, or abandoning them to pick up the ends of stretchers.
Sten and Alex held, just where the broad boulevard opened, the boulevard Sten had sent the
Victory
roaring down toward the embassy, lifetimes earlier.
The square was a black swirl, as yet another tornado came onstage. Palace walls ripped away, spinning out into the near-vacuum low-pressure area, and were caught by the cyclone and lifted thousands of meters up, into the overhanging cloud.
Then the vortex stalked forward once more, wind roaring and speed building, toward and through the palace that had once been the pride of the Khaqans, then had briefly housed Dr. Iskra.
The palace vanished in a swirl.
The tornado's fellows, spawn of that great brooding wall cloud, came on, inexorably planing the soldiers of the Altaics, the shaky Confederation they had fought for, and that meaningless vanity of a palace that meant power from the face of Rurik.
They left nothing—nothing but chaos.