“They're insisting that everyone fill out emergency evacuation forms.”
“Oh, for the love of God ... Deal with it.”
Chigma showed teethâa distinctly threatening gesture from a species that would eat pretty much anything it could fit down its throat and was remarkably adaptable about the latter. “Yes, sir.”
“Captain ...” Lieutenant Franks' golden brows drew in and he frowned after the First Sergeant. “Begging your pardon, sir, but a Krai may not be the most diplomatic ...”
“Diplomatic?” the captain interrupted. “We've got a few thousand civilians to get off this rock before a whole crapload of Others climb right up their butts. If they wanted it done diplomatically, they shouldn't have called in the Corps.” He paused and shot the lieutenant a frown of his own. “Shouldn't you be at the first level by now?”
“Sir!”
Torin fell into step at his right shoulder as Franks hurried off the concourse and out onto the road that joined the seven levels of Simunthitir into one continuous spiral. Designed for the easy transportation of ore carriers up to the port, it was also a strong defensive position with heavy gates to close each level off from those below; the layout ensured that Sho'quo Company would maintain the high ground as they withdrew to the port. If not for the certain fact that the Others were traveling with heavy artilleryâsignificantly heavier than their own EM223sâand sufficient numbers to climb to the high ground over the piled bodies of their dead, she'd be thinking this was a highly survivable engagement. Ignoring the possibility that the Others' air support would get off a lucky drop.
“Well, Staff, it looks like we've got the keys to the city. It's up to us to hold the gates at all costs.”
And provided she could keep Lieutenant Franks from getting them all killedâbut
that
was pretty much business as usual.
Â
“Anything happen while I was gone?”
Sergeant Anne Chou shook her head without taking her attention from the scanner. “Not a thing. Looks like they waited until you got back.”
Torin peered out over the undulating plain but couldn't see that anything had changed. “What are you getting?”
“Just picked up the leading edge of the unfriendlies, but they're packed too close together to get a clear reading on numbers.”
“Professional opinion?”
The other woman looked over at that and grinned. “One fuck of a lot, Staff.”
“Great.” Torin switched her com to command channel. “Lieutenant, we've got a reading on the perimeter.”
“Is their artillery in range?”
“Not yet, sir.” Torin glanced up into a sky empty of all but the distant flashes of the battle going on up above the atmosphere where the vacuum jockeys from both sides kept the other side from controlling the ultimate high ground. “I imagine they'll let us know.”
“Keep me informed.”
“Yes, sir.”
“You think he's up to this?” Anne asked when Torin tongued off her microphone.
“Since the entire plan is that we shoot and back up, shoot and back up, rinse and repeat, I think we'll be fine.” The lieutenant had to be watched more closely moving forward.
Anne nodded, well aware of the subtext. “Glad to hear it.”
The outer walls of Simunthitir's lowest level of buildings presented a curved stone face to the world about seven meters high, broken by a single gate. Running along the top of those buildings was a continuous line of battlement fronted by a stone balustrade about a meter and a half high.
Battlements and balustrades,
Torin thought as she made her way to the gate.
Nothing like getting back to the basics.
“Trey, how's it going?”
The di'Taykan Sergeant glanced up, her hair a brilliant cerulean corona around her head. “She's packed tight, Staff. We're just about to fuse the plug.”
They'd stuffed the gate full of the hovercraft used to move people and goods inside the city. Individually, each cart weighed about two hundred kilos, hardly enough to stop even a lackluster assault, but crammed into the gatewayâwrestled into position by the heavy gunners and their exoskeletonsâand then fused into one solid mass by a few well placed demo charges, the gate would disappear and the city would present a solid face to the enemy.
As Trey moved the heavies away, Lance Corporal Sluun moved forward keying the final parameters into his slate.
“First in Go and Blow, eh?” Lieuentant Franks said quietly by Torin's left shoulder.
“Yes, sir.” Sluun had kicked ass at his TS3 demolition course.
A trio of planes screamed by, closely followed by three Marine 774s keeping up a steady stream of fire. Two of the enemy managed to drop their loadsâboth missed the cityâwhile the third peeled off in an attempt to engage their pursuers. The entire tableau shrieked out of sight in less than minute.
“I only mention it,” the lieutenant continued when they could hear themselves think again, “because there's always the chance we could blow not only the gate but a section of the wall as well.”
“Trust in the training, sir. Apparently Sluun paid attention in class.”
“Firing in five ...”
“We might want to step back, sir.”
“... four ...”
“Trust in the training, Staff?”
“... three ...”
“Yes, sir. But there's no harm in hedging our bets.”
“... two ...”
They stopped four meters back.
“... one. Fire in the hole!”
The stones vibrated gently under their feet.
And a moment later ...
“We've got a good solid plug, Lieutenant.”
Trey's voice came over the group channel.
“They'll need the really big guns to get through it.”
Right on cue: the distinctive whine of incoming artillery.
This time, the vibrations underfoot were less than gentle.
Four, five, six impacts ... and a pause.
“Damage?”
“Got a hole into one of the warehouses, Staff.”
Corporal Dave Hayman's voice came over the com.
“Demo team's filling in the hole now.”
“Good.” She tongued off the microphone. “Everything else hit higher up, sir. I imagine we've got civilian casualties.”
Franks' lips thinned. “Why the hell isn't Arver pulsing their targeting computers?” he demanded grimly.
Shots seven, eight, and nine missed the port entirely.
“I think it took them a moment to get the frequency, sir.”
Ten, eleven, and twelve blew in the air.
Confident that the specialists were doing their jobs, the Marines on the wall ignored the barrage. They all knew there'd be plenty to get excited about later. Electronics were easy for both sides to block, which was why the weapon of choice in the Corps was a KC-7, a chemically operated projectile weapon. Nothing disrupted it but hands-on physical force, and the weighted stock made a handy club in a pinch. Torin appreciated a philosophy that expected to get pinched.
Eventually, it would come down to flesh versus flesh. It always did.
As another four planes screamed by, Torin took a look over the front parapet and then turned to look back in over the gate. “Trey, you got any more of those carts down there?”
“Plenty of them, Staff.”
“All right, let's run as many as will fit up here to the top of the wall and send those that don't fit up a level.”
“Planning on dropping them on the enemy?” Lieutenant Franks grinned.
“Yes, sir.”
“Oh.” Somewhat taken aback, he frowned and one of those remaining shiny patches flared up. “Isn't dropping scrap on the enemy, I don't know ...”
Torin waited patiently as, still frowning, he searched for the right word.
“UnMarine-like?”
Or perhaps he'd needed the time to make up a new word.
“Look at it this way, sir, if you were them and you thought there was a chance of having two hundred kilos dropped on your head, wouldn't you be a little hesitant in approaching the wall?”
“I guess I would ...”
He guessed. Torin, on the other hand, knew full well that were the situations reversed, Lieutenant Franks would be dying to gallantly charge the port screaming
Once more into the breach!
And since her place was beside him and dying would be the operative word, she had further reason to be happy they were on this side of the wall. If people were going to sing about her, she'd just as soon they sang about a long career and a productive retirement.
Â
The Others came over the ridge in a solid line of soldiers and machines, the sound of their approach all but drowning out the scream of the first civilian transport lifting off. Marine flyers escorted it as far as the edge of the atmosphere, where the navy took over and the Marines raced back to face the bomber the Others had sent to the port. One of Lieutenant Arver's sammies took it out before it had a change to drop its load. The pilot arced around the falling plume of wreckage and laid a contrail off toward the mountains, chased away from the massed enemy by two ships from
their
air support.
According to Torin's scanner, these particular soldiers fighting for the coalition the Confederation referred to as the Others were mammals; two, maybe three, species of them given the variant body temperatures. It was entirely possible she had more in common physically with the enemy than she did with at least half of the people she was expected to protectâthe Rakva were avian, the Niln reptilian, and both were disproportionately represented among the civilian population of Simunthitir.
The odds were even better that she'd have an easier time making conversation with any one of the approaching enemy than she would with any civilian regardless of species. Find her a senior noncom, and she'd guarantee it. Soldiering was a fairly simple profession after all. Achieve the objective. Get your people out alive.
Granted, the objectives usually differed.
Behind her in the city, in direct counterpoint to her thoughts, someone screamed a protest at having to leave behind their various bits of accumulated crap as the remaining civilians on the first level were herded toward the port. It never failed to amaze her how people hung on to the damnedest things when running for their lives. The Others
would
break into the first level. It was only a question of when.
She frowned at an unlikely reading.
“What is it, Staff Sergeant?”
“I'm not sure ...” There were six, no seven, huge inert pieces of something advancing with the enemy. They weren't living, and with no power signature, they couldn't be machinery.
The first of Lieutenant Arver's mortars fired, locked on to the enemy's artillery. The others followed in quick succession, hoping to get in a hit before their targeting scanners were scrambled in turn. A few Marines cheered as something in the advancing horde blew. From the size of the explosion, at least one of the big guns had been taken outâalong with the surrounding soldiers.
“They're just marching into an entrenched position,” Franks muttered. “This won't be battle, this will be slaughter.”
“I doubt they'll just keep marching, sir.” Almost before she finished speaking, a dozen points flared on her scanner and she switched her com to group. “It's about to get noisy people!” She dropped behind one of the carts. Lieutenant Franks waited until the absolute last moment before joining her. She suspected he was being an inspiration to the platoon. Personally, she always felt it was more inspiring to have your lieutenant in one piece, but hey, that was her.
The artillery barrage before the battleâany battleâhad one objective. Do as much damage to the enemy as possible. Their side. The other side. All a soldier could do was wait it out and hope they didn't get buried in debris.
“Keep them from sneaking forward, people!” It wasn't technically necessary to yell; the helmet coms were intelligent enough to pick up her voice and block the sound of the explosions in the air, the upper city, and out on the plains, but there was a certain satisfaction in yelling that she had no intention of giving up. She pointed her KC-7 over the edge of the wall. “Don't worry about the artilleryâthey're aiming at each other, not at you!”
“Dubious comfort, Staff!”
Torin grinned at the Marine who'd spoken. “It's the only kind I offer, Haysole!”
Ears and turquoise hair clamped tight against his head, the di'Taykan returned her grin. “You're breaking my heart!”
“I'll break something else if you don't put your damned helmet on!”
The di'Taykans were believed to be the most enthusiastically nondiscriminating sexual adventurers in known space, and Private Haysole di'Stenjic seemed to want to enthusiastically prove he was more di'Taykan than most. While allowances were made within both branches of the military for species-specific behavior, Haysole delighted in stepping over the lineâalthough in his defense he often didn't seem to know just where the line was. He'd made corporal twice and was likely never going to get there again unless casualties in the Corps got much, much worse. Given that he was the stereotypical good-humored, well-liked bad boy of the platoon, Torin was always amazed when he came out of an engagement in one piece.
“Staff.”
Corporal Hollice's voice sounded in her helmet. His fireteam anchored the far end of the wall.
“Picking up unfriendlies approaching our sector.”
Torin glanced over at the lieutenant who was obviouslyâobvious to her anywayâfighting the urge to charge over to that sector and face the unfriendlies himself, mano a mano. “Mark your targets, people; the official number seems to be one fuck of a lot and we're not carrying unlimited ammo.”