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The Human Legion Deluxe Box Set 2

Page 51

by Tim C Taylor


  Every instinct told her to exploit this unexpected development, and she had already raised several options with her staff, but Indiya had ordered Xin to wait until the senior Legion commanders had met.

  A comm signal pinged. It was Indiya with the other army group commanders in tow. At least it hadn’t been a long wait.

  “What effect do these nuclear fires have on your operation, Lieutenant-General Lee?” Indiya asked.

  “Even my Assault Marines can’t advance through the inside of a fusion reaction. It will cause delays, and we will have to switch to alternate bridge heads down into the main habitat, but I don’t expect as much from the defenders either. Now we know how to set the Flek alight, let’s do a proper job. I can set my scour copters to cleanse the top of the Australia habitat with nuclear fire.”

  “My operation relies upon a combined effort,” protested Lieutenant-General Mountain Root, the commander of Army Group Deep Strike. “My forces can keep Australia isolated, prevent reinforcements getting through for four hours. But I cannot hold off the rest of the world forever. I need Army Group Sky Strike to open up the habitat so that General Aelingir can deliver the knockout blow. The enemy’s outer defenses are smashed anyway. Let’s proceed without further delay.”

  “By now, your soldiers are deep underground or underwater,” said Xin, recognizing that she was trembling with excitement even if the combat drugs meant she couldn’t feel the emotion.

  “They are,” replied Mountain Root. “What of it?”

  “We can set the atmosphere ablaze,” said Xin. “My weapon techs give me an 85 percent chance that with a sustained effort we can set off a chain reaction. Once it sets off, we will have just enough time to get away before it spreads uncontrollably. Your forces will be safe, Mountain Root, but the air would have gone, and the White Knight homeworld will be dead forever.”

  “That’s hubris talking,” snapped Indiya, “or combat drugs are clouding your judgement. Everyone in the Human Legion of whatever race is bound by a legal agreement to be a vassal servant of the White Knights. Earth is bound by the Vancouver Accords, and they bind you and me, Lieutenant-General Lee. You know the consequence if we break the law.”

  “Of course,” said Xin. “If we break the law and murder our legal masters, then the rest of the Trans-Species Union will not permit such flagrantly illegal activity. We will achieve what is otherwise impossible and unite the galaxy against us. No one, not even the White Knights at their strongest could hope to withstand the combined forces of the Trans-Species Union. Certainly, the Legion couldn’t.”

  “Then why the suggestion?” asked Aelingir.

  “Because it is only an illegal action if we destroy the world on purpose. We are only here because we continue the legal pretense that we act always on behalf of the Emperor. But if an unfortunate accident were to happen, if the mysterious Flek had an unexpected and lethal interaction with our zero-point weapons, then the destruction of the White Knight homeworld would merely be collateral damage. These things happen in all wars.”

  No one spoke. Xin started to hope. Would they let her go ahead?

  “Arun would never allow it,” said Indiya in a voice of cold fury.

  “I’m not asking Arun,” shouted Xin, the calmness of the combat meds defeated by her anger at this ship rat lecturing her on how her man thought. Arun was hers, not that shriveled rat’s.

  “You will continue with Operation Blowtorch,” Indiya ordered. “You are not to deploy scour-copters and you will never again mention the idea of deliberately burning this world. If even a hint of a rumor that this was suggested ever gets out, then you will be court-martialed, and that goes for all of you.”

  Xin cut the connection and took another slug of combat drugs until her mind was no longer filled with the fantasy of snapping that scrawny neck with her bare hands.

  “Major-General Dragon-Strike!”

  “Yes, sir,” came the reply from a senior engineer loyal to her.

  “A change to the timetable. It’s time to send in the Marine Combat Engineers.”

  — Chapter 32 —

  The Scour Squadrons returned to the world tree but this time they were under the direction of the Marine Engineer battalions who descended in giant Stork shuttles, accompanied by bulldozers, blasting and leveling equipment, and the tactical squads who would protect the combat engineers while they worked.

  Before the combat engineering teams could even reach the candidate landing zones they would prepare for the waiting divisions of Assault Marines, the scour-copters set back to work, slicing away at the jumbled wreckage of the world tree to carve out navigable tunnels down.

  Many times, the combined units would be beaten back by the nuclear fires still raging, or by the thickness of the obstacles they faced. But of enemy action, they encountered only an occasional shoulder-launched missile, easily batted away, but time was of the essence. Each time the engineering parties were forced to retrace their steps felt like a defeat, a delay in which the enemy would stiffen its defenses.

  The engineers who did make it through landed on solid ground, the roof of a giant habitat that covered the continent, from which the towers and spires had sprouted. Once their areas were secure, the combat engineers cleared and leveled, piling up mounds of rubble to offer some protection to the artillery batteries who would soon get to work.

  — Chapter 33 —

  The staff officers on the Gallipoli were pale with worry – or whatever passed for extreme anxiety with their physiology. There were only so many times they could tell the commander-in-chief of the Human Legion that their CO was unavailable.

  Even if Indiya was only acting C-in-C.

  Xin was proud of her staff team. They had proven their competence and their loyalty. She wasn’t about to betray that loyalty by getting them all arrested.

  She signaled to put Indiya through.

  “Well?” demanded the Navy rat.

  Xin had never heard so much disgust concentrated into a single syllable.

  She sighed, finally realizing how weary of war she was. There wouldn’t be much more of this drent to put up with. “I was going to tell you, Admiral, that I was using my leeway as a field commander to put a flexible interpretation on your order to keep the scour-copters away. I kept them purely in a support capacity to the combat engineers, and at no point risked burning the atmosphere. I obeyed the spirit of your order. That would all have been true, but the real answer is simpler. I promised Arun that I’d do whatever it took to get the job done. And that’s what I did. What are you going to do, arrest me?”

  The pause was drawn out enough to begin gnawing at Xin’s guts. Either court-martial me or let me do my job, you scrawny ship rat. Don’t leave me dangling.

  “Yes,” said Indiya. “Just as soon as I deem your role in Operation Blowtorch to be non-essential. I will not tolerate insubordination.”

  “Fine. Now get out of my face. I’ve got a battle to win.”

  Xin slumped back into her seat. Her staff officers were trying to pretend they hadn’t overheard her half of that exchange. She considered telling them not to worry, that the latest update from Arun’s medical team was that his body had finally gotten its act together, and he was stabilizing rapidly. Indiya could play games, but she wouldn’t be commander-in-chief much longer. He’d shared the Bonaventure’s secret with Indiya for decades – that still hurt like venom through her guts – but if it ever came to a choice between her and the ship rat, Arun would prevaricate and then make the right choice. Indiya was finished.

  “Show’s over,” she growled. “Major-General Dragon-Strike, signal the engineers to withdraw. It’s time to get boots on the ground.”

  — Chapter 34 —

  “There’s your gun line,” thundered Master Gunner Zinelli, referring to the imaginary red rectangles visible in the head-up display inside Lance Bombardier Willie Knopf’s helmet. “I want your pieces anchored in 60 seconds and ready to fire no more than one minute later. Don’t you dare let me
down. And I will be watching.”

  Knopf barely registered Master Gunny’s words. When you let it be known you were in the aerial artillery, the sheen of glamor won a slug of admiration from even the most seen-it-all veteran. Judicious use of said glamor had opened up for Knopf some memorable rack-time encounters, but he wasn’t on liberty now. The reality of this battlefield was screaming for his mother, while clutching desperately onto the platform of an MA-41 aerial assault cannon. The sensation of being dropped out of an aerial transport, 3000 meters above a jumble of broken metal spires didn’t feel ‘aerial’ – ‘delayed impact’, more like. The jet packs on the gun crews’ battlesuits enabled short hops, not flight, as did the MA-41’s firing platform.

  Knopf tried to ignore the shards of metal he was shooting past, mere meters from his head. Instead, he concentrated on the hollow red square with the number three inside that the Master Gunner had painted over the target firing position. But the firing position was more-or-less a flat area, cleared by the combat engineers from the mess of broken spires that littered the upper level of the metal world to a depth of 2000 meters.

  He flinched as they descended through the broken walkways and spires, grateful that the artillery piece’s handholds were designed to withstand the crushing, powered grip of a terrified lance bombardier. Thank frakk too that Bomb was steering the gun platform through the lethal maze of tangled metal, with its eight-strong crew hanging on for grim life. Either Bombardier Kristens had nerves like a Tallerman, or she was on serious combat meds.

  “Look out!” cried Velez.

  Knopf forced himself to look up, just in time to see Gunner Velez smack against the jagged edge of a twisted spire. The metal shards snatched Velez off the gun platform and wedged him within its metal embrace.

  Knopf looked away and squeezed his eyes shut.

  Gunny sent a piercing shriek of white noise into Knopf’s helmet. “Don’t you shut your eyes on me, Lance Bombardier Knopf. Velez is still alive, which is more than can be said for you if you close your eyes again. Got it?”

  “Yes, Master Gunner.”

  Knopf forced his eyes open and tried to focus on the MA-41’s barrel. He tried to recite a gun servicing drill, but nothing could distract him from the gut-wrenching terror of this descent.

  “Remember, I expect sixty-second anchoring,” said Gunny, and Knopf realized with a start that their firing position was racing up to meet them fast. He pushed away from the gun platform, ignited his jets and slowed to a gentle landing.

  It took a handful of heartbeats for the realization to sink in that he hadn’t died, and then years of training and experience took over.

  The flat rectangle of the MA-41’s firing platform was several meters adrift of the position Gunny had assigned. The seven surviving gun crew manhandled the weapon into its rightful place, and then Knopf activated the anchoring system.

  It was his job to monitor its progress while the rest of the crew prepared to serve the artillery piece. He crouched down as his head-up display showed a seismic reading of the structure beneath the gun platform. It was no good setting up atop a damaged roof that would collapse on the first fire. They were in luck: their little slab of roof over this continental sized habitat had superficial heat damage, but was essentially sound. Knopf set off the gel layer that would bind the bottom of the gun platform to the roof and cushion some of the huge recoil forces. Heavy duty stabilizer pins cut through the roof to give extra stability.

  “Gun platform secure, Bomb,” Knopf reported.

  “Copy that,” replied the bombardier. “Go check that ‘C’ Echelon has bothered to show their hairy arses.”

  A few moments with his HUD set to tactical mode was enough for Knopf to check the status of the battery’s deployment. ‘A’ Echelon, including Major Schneider the battery commander and three forward observers, had landed nearly a klick away to liaise with the Assault Marine Battalion for whom they were tasked with providing fire support. Seven out of the eight guns in the battery had survived the drop, and were setting up in the staggered gun line chosen by Master Gunner Zinelli, theoretically under the direction of Lieutenant Parker. They were seasoned veterans, all, but everyone in the gun crews knew that the real magicians of the 2nd Aerial Artillery Regiment were ‘C’ Echelon – the logistical wizards who were setting up armored shelters for the growing pile of ammo boxes a short distance away, and establishing supply routes to the fortified regimental ammo dumps being established in the area. They were also stretching tenuous logistical fingers up into the air, where AI-controlled supply crates were obeying instructions to fly down to their designated locations, while other crates maintained an aerial holding pattern under cover of the fallen spires and walkways.

  Lieutenant Parker was already over with ‘C’ Echelon, and the result of her exhortations was the first pair of transport platforms already laden with shells and on their way to the gun line.

  “Ammo line looks good, Bomb,” reported Knopf, and used the opportunity of this brief lull to run an equipment check on the MA-41.

  Constant equipment checks were like an itch to the gunners that constantly needed scratching, but Knopf verified that everything was in order, and seconds later the gun was loaded, shells were stacked within easy reach, and Gamma Battery, 2nd Aerial Artillery awaited firing orders.

  The division’s objective was to punch a hole through the top layers of the habitat to be exploited by shock troops, who would echelon through their division, the fresh troops passing through their tired ranks to renew the attack with vigor. The crazy thing was that the first wave of scour-copters had set the damned Flek-clouds alight, setting off miniature suns that had melted the towers and walkways of this world tree and burned deep down into the solid structure below. The molten metal had cooled into a formidable obstacle, a dense thicket of metal hundreds of meters deep. There was no way through many of the entry points into the habitat that the planners had identified from orbit.

  So they needed new holes to be punched, and under the dense canopy of ruined towers, orbital and air support would prove tricky. The role of heavy fire support fell naturally to the artillery. Even without the maze of spires, the division would still have relied on their artillery, because everywhere was this poisonous, choking cloud of rusty-orange gas, muffling the explosions of the battle raging across the rooftop to Australia, and playing havoc with targeting systems. An artillery piece might not pack as much electronic wizardry as a missile, or look as showy as a squadron of ground attack aircraft strafing with their railguns, but all the gunners needed to get the job done was a forward observer equipped with the Mark1 eyeball and a fire control system programmed with the mathematics of parabolic trajectories, and tweaked for local gravity and atmospheric conditions.

  No amount of this sodding Flek is gonna stop us gunners doing our job, Knopf told himself. But the clouds seemed to hear his thoughts, because they began rolling in to the battery’s position like a sickly sea mist.

  “It’s like the planet doesn’t want us here,” said Gunner Stuart.

  “It’s a moon, not a planet,” said Gunner Evans. “Dongwit!”

  “Whatever it is,” retorted Stuart, “it’s sending in the Flek to cover up the stench from your arse, Evans. Trust you to soil yourself on the ride down.”

  “Stay sharp,” said the bombardier. “Battery Captain’s receiving firing orders, I can tell by the way he’s holding his head.”

  Knopf looked over to Captain Jones to see for himself, but couldn’t make out more than a human-sized smudge where his tac-display said he should be. He didn’t doubt the Bomb was right – she had an uncanny knack of knowing these things.

  Sure enough, new target data came through and the team serving Number 3 gun swiveled the piece around to the north-east while Knopf assisted the Bomb in programming the fire direction control system. The target was four klicks away – practically point-blank range on a proper battlefield of low hills or hilltop emplacements. However, the battery was deployed at the b
ottom of this crazy pile of ruined metal. A conventional trajectory would simply bounce off an obstruction, but the MA-41 could elevate its barrel like a howitzer, and they prepared a trajectory that would fire up through the way they had descended, and then down onto the target. The shell would rattle and bounce on the way down until the altitude-sensing fuse said it was time to blow. Besides, the entire regiment would combine their fire on this single target. Knopf didn’t know what the target was, and certainly couldn’t see for klicks through the debris and Flek, but he didn’t need that information. He had a geolocation, and that was all he required.

  With the gun loaded and aimed, there was nothing left to do but wait and listen to the sounds of the attack going in from the battalion of Assault Marines that they were supposed to be giving fire support to.

  Then Lieutenant Parker, the Command Post Officer, gave the order to fire, and the gun line thundered.

  Knopf’s role was to monitor the status of the gun while the others aimed, loaded, and fired. He had trained and served for many years with HA-205s, a much heavier artillery piece than the MA-41’s lightweight design that meant its barrel was prone to oscillate.

  The crews and machinery of the battery worked together as a single unit, raining shell after shell down on the target location. Knopf ignored the muzzle flashes, the rumbles that threatened to shake the rooftop into dust, and the sounds of the gun crew – all he concentrated on was the gun, making minor adjustments to the fire direction system to optimize the trajectory.

  “That’s your fun over,” said the Master Gunner to all gun teams. “Prepare to pull out.”

 

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