War To The Knife (34 page)

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Authors: Peter Grant

BOOK: War To The Knife
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As soon as the charges were wired into a ring-main, the leader of the team put everyone aboard the vehicles and sent them several blocks away for safety while he connected a plunger to the wire.

“Ready?” he asked his deputy, crouching beside him behind the cover of the smashed perimeter wall.

“Ready. Blow it!”

He shoved the plunger down. A massive shockwave rolled over them as the ground bounced and shook. The ten-story building heaved, shuddered, and collapsed straight down into its own basement, taking with it hundreds of screaming SS personnel trapped on the upper nine floors. A huge choking cloud of smoke and dust rose high above the ruins.

The two kept their heads well down until fragments stopped falling on and around them. The leader glanced at his deputy, shaking his head in a vain attempt to clear the ringing from his ears. “D’you think we might have used a tad too much explosive there?”

“Perhaps just a skosh.”

“Oh, well. They were SS, after all.”

“True. If anyone deserved overkill, they did.”

“My feelings exactly. Come on, let’s go!”

Grinning, they raced for the transports through the fog of smoke and dust.

~ ~ ~

MILITARY GOVERNOR’S COMPOUND

The Bactrian Army offered more resistance at the Command Bunker than at any other site in Tapuria. The assault force managed to cut their way into the Military Governor’s administrative building without too much difficulty, but that was because the forces guarding it chose not to die at their posts. Instead they made a fighting withdrawal into the adjacent underground bunker, covering each other’s retreat, carrying their wounded. Soon the bunker was filled with over a hundred defenders. A similar number prepared defensive positions around its perimeter, hurriedly digging foxholes and scrapes, and beat back all attempts by the attackers to penetrate it.

The leader of the assault force consulted her subordinates, then made a decision. Technical specialists filtered their way to the front line, each carrying cases and boxes, consoles strapped to their chests. As they opened the containers and set up their gear, she contacted the surviving shuttle still supporting her group.

“I need you to open a way for the bugs,” she told its pilot. “Can you use your plasma cannon to shoot a hole in the earth over the bunker, all the way down to the roof, and then through it?”

“Might be tricky – that’s hardened plascrete under there. I don’t want to burn out my cannon by firing too many shots too quickly. Let me call one or two of the others to help.”

“OK, thanks. Quick as you can, please. We’re taking casualties.”

Two more Laredo shuttles swiftly joined their colleague. They formed a circle overhead, following the lead of the first shuttle. As each passed over a landmark building near the perimeter they fired a single shot from their plasma cannon, aimed at an angle into the mound of earth above the bunker. The first five plasma bolts did no more than dig out massive quantities of soil, raising a cloud of dust and depositing layers of grit and grime on attackers and defenders alike. They momentarily forgot their differences in a barrage of lurid curses directed at their airborne tormentors. The sixth shot exposed the plascrete roof. It took four more bolts to cave it in and open a huge hole to the sky.

“You got it,” the lead shuttle radioed the assault team leader. “I’ll – ”

Whatever the pilot was going to say was lost in the bellow of an explosion as a shoulder-fired missile slammed into the shuttle. It wiped out half the reaction thrusters on the port side. The shuttle shuddered in mid-air, then flipped over on its back before the pilot could reduce power to the starboard thrusters. Once inverted, with the thick lower atmosphere making it impossible to use its powerful gravitic drive, there could be no recovery. It plummeted to earth and smashed onto the perimeter fence before exploding in flames.

The leader crossed herself. “Jesus, Mary and Joseph, receive their souls,” she prayed. “While you’re at it, watch out for mine, please, just in case.” She keyed her microphone. “Tech teams, the roof is open. I say again, the roof is open. Start the attack.”

The technicians heard, and reached for their consoles. The assault bugs that Dave and his team had captured in the Matopo Hills had been reprogrammed in time for this assault. A swarm of over a hundred flitterbugs rose from the ground and flew towards the hole in the mound of earth over the bunker, while a similar number of crawling nanobugs advanced across the uneven ground towards the perimeter. Defenders who saw them coming tried to shoot at them, but had to expose themselves to incoming fire to do so. Many were hit, and the others were forced to hunker down in their foxholes and scrapes. Some reached for identification modules and switched them on, only to learn the hard way that these bugs didn’t respond to their signals. All around the perimeter defenders began to scream, struggle and die as the nanobugs crept up on them and fired toxin-laden needles from point-blank range.

The flitterbugs ignored the outer defenses. They flew down into the hole blasted into the upper level of the Command Bunker, spreading out along corridors and down stairwells, operating in autonomous mode, penetrating to every floor in their search for targets. Any movement invited a poison needle fired into exposed skin – face, neck, hands, wrists, whatever was available.

Some of the bunker’s defenders, warned by the death throes of their colleagues, shut themselves in offices, toilets or other rooms, hoping that the doors would keep out the intruders. The flitterbugs dealt with all the targets that were immediately available, then those with needles still in their firing tubes settled along the ceiling of each corridor, folded their mechanical wings, and waited. Their battery packs held enough power to keep them in standby mode for a week to ten days. If anything moved during that time, they would swoop down and fire on it. Any rescuers trying to penetrate the Command Bunker to extricate their colleagues would also be targeted.

As the nanobugs eliminated the last defenders outside and the firing died away along the entire perimeter, the assault force leader called in her troops and counted heads. Fewer than half her soldiers were still alive. She divided them into three groups of approximately equal size.

“Let’s put our most severely wounded aboard a shuttle, then get the hell out of here,” she told them. “The enemy’s bound to be bringing in reinforcements from the outer perimeter. We’ve got an hour at most before they get here. Find any usable vehicles nearby and load them with any portable heavy weapons that are left in the bunker defenses, then take to the side roads. Avoid major transport arteries at all costs, because they’ll be using them. If you run into them, sell your lives dearly. After all we’ve done today, particularly – we hope – killing the Satrap, you know prisoners won’t be given a quick or easy death.”

The others nodded, shook hands, embraced and said their farewells to friends in the other groups, then scattered to search for vehicles in the surrounding streets and buildings.

~ ~ ~

ARENA

Gloria looked up as two soldiers helped a third into the aid station she’d established in one of the dressing-rooms. She peered through the smoky haze, then jumped to her feet as she recognized her husband.

“He’s not too badly hurt, Ma’am,” one of the soldiers hastily assured her. “It’s his arm.” They helped him sit down on a bench next to the table where she’d laid out her instruments, medications and bandages.

“All right, thanks, boys. You can run along now.”

“Thanks, Ma’am.”

As they hurried out she was already cutting away her husband’s sleeve. She sucked in her breath at the ruin of flesh, muscle, blood and bone that was his forearm. “What the hell hit you?”

“That was courtesy of Major-General Huvishka,” he said, wincing as she used forceps to gently pull a piece of grit out of the mangled flesh.
“Ow!
Easy there!”

“I’ll inject a nerve-blocker before I fix you up. You mean you were fighting your opposite number in person?”

“Yes. He was leading the Satrap and some others along a corridor. The reflective glass in the windows had been blown out in places, and our people in the parking lot saw them. They fired at them, but missed, and they ran down the passage into a set of offices at the end. I was with a nearby patrol, and we hurried over there and bottled them up. We tried to mount an assault before they had a chance to set up defenses, but they were too quick for us. Huvishka’s a damn good shot, I’ll give him that. He had only a split-second to see me crossing a doorway, but he still hit me with a snap shot. The rest of my boys put down covering fire to make him pull back while a couple of them dragged me out and brought me here.” He sighed as the nerve blocker began to take effect. “Oh, that feels better!”

“It won’t last,” she warned. “I can’t do a proper job on this with first aid alone. It needs a hospital.”

“Well, we don’t have one handy, do we?”

They looked into each other’s eyes for a long moment before she shook her head. “No.”

“Then fix it up so I can fight. I’ll use a pulser in my other hand.”

“Was the Crown Prince with the Satrap?” she asked as she took up forceps and swab.

“There were four people. We identified the General and the Satrap, but didn’t get a clear look at the other two. I think he’s probably there – after all, they escaped from the arena together. We’ve killed several of their guards, which accounts for their reduced numbers.”

“So what are you going to do next?”

“I’ve called in fire support from a shuttle. There’s no point in risking our lives in a frontal assault – we didn’t have enough troops to begin with, and they’ve whittled us down just as we have them.” The stadium trembled to a monstrous impact. “That’ll be the shuttle now. I told the pilot to give my people time to get clear, then take out that entire section of offices.” Another mighty blow shook the building, then another, accompanied by the blast of a plasma cannon from high outside.

As she was winding a bandage around the dressing covering his entire forearm, a soldier came running in. “We got them, General, Sir! The shuttle blew the whole suite to rubble and ruin. We went in and picked our way through the wreckage. The Satrap’s head is rolling around the floor – we don’t know where his body is, probably underneath the wreckage. There are a couple of body parts sticking out from beneath the rubble. One’s wearing Bactrian Major-General’s insignia on the only shoulder we can see. The head’s been crushed by rubble. It’s unrecognizable.”

Allred sighed. “I’d have liked to have seen them all dead in person, but I’ll take what I can get.” He waited while Gloria fitted a sling around his neck and tucked his arm into it, then rose to his feet. Bending, he kissed her gently. “It’s time for us to get the hell out of here. We’ve got two shuttles still in the air. I’ll have them land outside, then I’ll bring a few able-bodied soldiers to carry our wounded aboard. Go with them. I’ll follow with the surface convoy. We’ve found three utility vehicles, a truck and an armored car that are still usable. They’ll be enough for our survivors.”

“All right, darling. The nerve block will last a couple of hours. After that, use your injector.”

“I’ll do that. I love you.”

“Love you too.”

He kissed her again, turned, and was gone.

 

March 31st 2850 GSC, 12:30

LMV
BENBECULA,
IN SPACE

The Spacer escorting Dave, Manuel and Tony knocked on the frame of the doorway. “Permission for three visitors to enter the Bridge, please, Sir?”

Captain Grassby looked up from his command console. “Yes, send them in. Thank you, Spacer.” He glanced approvingly at the visitors’ fresh clothing and still-damp hair. “I see you all took the opportunity to clean up.”

“Yes, thank you, Sir,” Dave acknowledged. “After hours in a spacesuit I was a bit whiffy, to put it mildly.”

“I’m afraid that’s an occupational hazard. I’m glad you’re here. We may have a problem.” He stood up. “Come to the Communications console with me. I want you to hear something.”

As they walked across the spacious bridge, he told them, “Bear in mind that the speed of light is something we have to take into account when it comes to communication and what we see in the Plot display.” He indicated a three-dimensional holographic projection at the next console. “That’s currently showing the space for two light-hours around Laredo. Note the patrolling Bactrian merchant cruiser – that red icon – and the Satrap’s yacht that fled the space station – that’s the blue icon.”

“They’re almost touching,” Manuel observed.

“Yes. What you’re about to hear is a string of voice messages between the two ships, with delays due to light speed removed to make them sound like a continuous conversation.” He turned to the woman at the Communications console. “Play that sequence of messages, please, Judy.”

“Sure, Skipper.” She pressed a button, and they listened as the console speakers played back what she’d recorded.

“Satrap Dadarsi
calling
Oxyartes
. Emergency! Emergency! Missiles have been fired from the space station at our two escorts and at your sister ship! They’ve all been hit – I don’t know how badly. My Captain and half our crew are planetside, so in the absence of orders I’m heading in your direction to come under the protection of your missiles. Over.”

“Oxyartes
to
Dadarsi,
I’m altering course to close the planet. There’s no sign of any hostile forces in the system, so I can’t fathom why the station fired on the other ships. Have you any idea what’s going on? Over.”

“Dadarsi
to
Oxyartes
. We’ve just begun to pick up messages from ground stations indicating that something’s wrong in Tapuria. There seems to be some sort of widespread attack going on down there. Over.”

“Oxyartes
to
Dadarsi
. That means the rebels are involved in this somehow. I don’t know what we can do about it yet – we’re going to have to wait for more information and orders from planetside. Join me and proceed in formation until we know more. Over.”

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