by Keith Laumer
“And packed rubble in behind them,” Reynolds finished for him. “All right, Lieutenant, I believe you! Now for the big one: What started that machine on a rampage?”
“Should have known they couldn’t hold down a Bolo Mark XXVIII!” The old man’s eyes lit up. “Take more than a few million tons of rock to stop Lenny when his battle board was lit!”
“Lenny?”
“That’s my old command unit out there, son. I saw the markings on the Tri-D. Unit LNE of the Dinochrome Brigade!”
“Listen!” Reynolds snapped out. “Here’s what I intend to try …” He outlined his plan.
“Ha!” Sanders snorted. “It’s a gutsy notion, mister, but Lenny won’t give it a sneeze.”
“You didn’t come here to tell me we were licked,” Reynolds cut in. “How about Brand’s batteries?”
“Hell, son, Lenny stood up to point-blank Hellbore fire on Toledo, and—”
“Are you telling me there’s nothing we can do?”
“What’s that? No, son, that’s not what I’m saying …”
“Then what!”
“Just tell these johnnies to get out of my way, mister. I think I can handle him.”
11
At the field comm hut, Pete Reynolds watched as the man who had been Lieutenant Sanders of the Volunteer Scouts pulled shiny black boots over his thin ankles and stood. The blouse and trousers of royal blue polyon hung on his spare frame like wash on a line. He grinned, a skull’s grin.
“It doesn’t fit like it used to; but Lenny will recognize it. It’ll help. Now, if you’ve got that power pack ready …”
Mayfield handed over the old-fashioned field instrument Sanders had brought in with him.
“It’s operating, sir—but I’ve already tried everything I’ve got on that infernal machine; I didn’t get a peep out of it.”
Sanders winked at him. “Maybe I know a couple of tricks you boys haven’t heard about.” He slung the strap over his bony shoulder and turned to Reynolds.
“Guess we better get going, mister. He’s getting close.”
In the rock car, Sanders leaned close to Reynolds’ ear. “Told you those Federal guns wouldn’t scratch Lenny. They’re wasting their time.”
Reynolds pulled the car to a stop at the crest of the road, from which point he had a view of the sweep of ground leading across to the city’s edge. Lights sparkled all across the towers of New Devon. Close to the walls, the converging fire of the ranked batteries of infinite repeaters drove into the glowing bulk of the machine, which plowed on, undeterred. As he watched, the firing ceased.
“Now, let’s get in there, before they get some other damn-fool scheme going,” Sanders said.
The rock car crossed the rough ground, swung wide to come up on the Bolo from the left side. Behind the hastily rigged radiation cover, Reynolds watched the immense silhouette grow before him.
“I knew they were big,” he said. “But to see one up close like this—” He pulled to a stop a hundred feet from the Bolo.
“Look at the side ports,” Sanders said, his voice crisper now. “He’s firing antipersonnel charges—only his plates are flat. If they weren’t, we wouldn’t have gotten within half a mile.” He unclipped the microphone and spoke into it:
“Unit LNE, break off action and retire to ten-mile line!”
Reynolds’ head jerked around to stare at the old man. His voice had rung with vigor and authority as he spoke the command.
The Bolo ground slowly ahead. Sanders shook his head, tried again.
“No answer, like that fella said. He must be running on nothing but memories now. …” He reattached the microphone, and before Reynolds could put out a hand, had lifted the anti-R cover and stepped off on the ground.
“Sanders—get back in here!” Reynolds yelled.
“Never mind, son. I’ve got to get in close. Contact induction.” He started toward the giant machine. Frantically, Reynolds started the car, slammed it into gear, pulled forward.
“Better stay back.” Sanders’ voice came from his field radio. “This close, that screening won’t do you much good.”
“Get in the car!” Reynolds roared. “That’s hard radiation!”
“Sure; feels funny, like a sunburn, about an hour after you come in from the beach and start to think maybe you got a little too much.” He laughed. “But I’ll get to him. …”
Reynolds braked to a stop, watched the shrunken figure in the baggy uniform as it slogged forward, leaning as against a sleet storm.
12
“I’m up beside him.” Sanders’ voice came through faintly on the field radio. “I’m going to try to swing up on his side. Don’t feel like trying to chase him any farther.”
Through the glasses, Reynolds watched the small figure, dwarfed by the immense bulk of the fighting machine, as he tried, stumbled, tried again, swung up on the flange running across the rear quarter inside the churning bogie wheel.
“He’s up,” he reported. “Damned wonder the track didn’t get him. …”
Clinging to the side of the machine, Sanders lay for a moment, bent forward across the flange. Then he pulled himself up, wormed his way forward to the base of the rear quarter turret, wedged himself against it. He unslung the communicator, removed a small black unit, clipped it to the armor; it clung, held by a magnet. He brought the microphone up to his face.
In the comm shack, Mayfield leaned toward the screen, his eyes squinted in tension. Across the field, Reynolds held the glasses fixed on the man lying across the flank of the Bolo. They waited. …
13
The walls are before me, and I ready myself for a final effort, but suddenly I am aware of trickle currents flowing over my outer surface. Is this some new trick of the Enemy? I tune to the wave energies, trace the source. They originate at a point in contact with my aft port armor. I sense modulation, match receptivity to a computed pattern. And I hear a voice:
“Unit LNE, break it off, Lenny. We’re pulling back now, boy. This is Command to LNE; pull back to ten miles. If you read me, Lenny, swing to port and halt.”
I am not fooled by the deception. The order appears correct, but the voice is not that of my Commander. Briefly I regret that I cannot spare energy to direct a neutralizing power flow at the device the Enemy has attached to me. I continue my charge.
“Unit LNE! Listen to me, boy; maybe you don’t recognize my voice, but it’s me. You see, boy—some time has passed. I’ve gotten old. My voice has changed some, maybe. But it’s me! Make a port turn, Lenny. Make it now!”
I am tempted to respond to the trick, for something in the false command seems to awaken secondary circuits which I sense have been long stilled. But I must not be swayed by the cleverness of the Enemy. My sensing circuitry has faded further as my energy cells drain; but I know where the Enemy lies. I move forward, but I am filled with agony, and only the memory of my comrades drives me on.
“Lenny, answer me. Transmit on the old private band—the one we agreed on. Nobody but me knows it, remember?”
Thus the Enemy seeks to beguile me into diverting precious power. But I will not listen.
“Lenny—not much time left. Another minute and you’ll be into the walls. People are going to die. Got to stop you, Lenny. Hot here. My God, I’m hot. Not breathing too well, now. I can feel it; cutting through me like knives. You took a load of Enemy power, Lenny; and now I’m getting my share. Answer me, Lenny. Over to you. …”
It will require only a tiny allocation of power to activate a communication circuit. I realize that it is only an Enemy trick, but I compute that by pretending to be deceived, I may achieve some trivial advantage. I adjust circuitry accordingly and transmit:
“Unit LNE to Command. Contact with Enemy defensive line imminent. Request supporting fire!”
“Lenny … you can hear me! Good boy, Lenny! Now make a turn, to port. Walls … close. …”
“Unit LNE to Command. Request positive identification; transmit code 685749.”
<
br /> “Lenny—I can’t … don’t have code blanks. But it’s me. …”
“In absence of recognition code, your transmission disregarded,” I send. And now the walls loom high above me. There are many lights, but I see them only vaguely. I am nearly blind now.
“Lenny—less’n two hundred feet to go. Listen, Lenny. I’m climbing down. I’m going to jump down, Lenny, and get around under your fore scanner pickup. You’ll see me, Lenny. You’ll know me then.”
The false transmission ceases. I sense a body moving across my side. The gap closes. I detect movement before me, and in automatic reflex fire anti-P charges before I recall that I am unarmed.
A small object has moved out before me, and taken up a position between me and the wall behind which the Enemy conceal themselves. It is dim, but appears to have the shape of a man. …
I am uncertain. My alert center attempts to engage inhibitory circuitry which will force me to halt, but it lacks power. I can override it. But still I am unsure. Now I must take a last risk; I must shunt power to my forward scanner to examine this obstacle more closely. I do so, and it leaps into greater clarity. It is indeed a man—and it is enclothed in regulation blues of the Volunteers. Now, closer, I see the face and through the pain of my great effort, I study it. …
14
“He’s backed against the wall,” Reynolds said hoarsely. “It’s still coming. A hundred feet to go—”
“You were a fool, Reynolds!” the mayor barked. “A fool to stake everything on that old dotard’s crazy ideas!”
“Hold it!” As Reynolds watched, the mighty machine slowed, halted, ten feet from the sheer wall before it. For a moment, it sat, as though puzzled. Then it backed, halted again, pivoted ponderously to the left, and came about.
On its side, a small figure crept up, fell across the lower gun deck. The Bolo surged into motion, retracing its route across the artillery-scarred gardens.
“He’s turned it.” Reynolds let his breath out with a shuddering sigh. “It’s headed out for open desert. It might get twenty miles before it finally runs out of steam.”
The strange voice that was the Bolo’s came from the big panel before Mayfield:
“Command. … Unit LNE reports main power cells drained, secondary cells drained; now operating at .037 per cent efficiency, using Final Emergency Power. Request advice as to range to be covered before relief maintenance available.”
“It’s a long way, Lenny …” Sanders’ voice was a bare whisper. “But I’m coming with you. …”
Then there was only the crackle of static. Ponderously, like a great mortally stricken animal, the Bolo moved through the ruins of the fallen roadway, heading for the open desert.
“That damned machine,” the mayor said in a hoarse voice. “You’d almost think it was alive.”
“You would at that,” Pete Reynolds said.
A RELIC OF WAR
THE OLD WAR machine sat in the village square, its impotent guns pointing aimlessly along the dusty street. Shoulder-high weeds grew rankly about it, poking up through the gaps in the two-yard-wide treads; vines crawled over the high, rust-and guano-streaked flanks. A row of tarnished enameled battle honors gleamed dully across the prow, reflecting the late sun.
A group of men lounged near the machine; they were dressed in heavy work clothes and boots; their hands were large and calloused, their faces weather-burned. They passed a jug from hand to hand, drinking deep. It was the end of a long workday and they were relaxed, good-humored.
“Hey, we’re forgetting old Bobby,” one said. He strolled over and sloshed a little of the raw whiskey over the soot-blackened muzzle of the blast cannon slanting sharply down from the forward turret. The other men laughed.
“How’s it going, Bobby?” the man called.
Deep inside the machine there was a soft chirring sound.
“Very well, thank you,” a faint, whispery voice scraped from a grill below the turret.
“You keeping an eye on things, Bobby?” another man called.
“All clear, the answer came: a bird-chirp from a dinosaur.
“Bobby, you ever get tired just setting here?”
“Hell, Bobby don’t get tired,” the man with the jug said. “He’s got a job to do, old Bobby has.”
“Hey, Bobby, what kind o’boy are you?” a plump, lazy-eyed man called.
“I am a good boy,” Bobby replied obediently.
“Sure Bobby’s a good boy.” The man with the jug reached up to pat the age-darkened curve of chromalloy above him. “Bobby’s looking out for us.”
Heads turned at a sound from across the square: the distant whine of a turbocar, approaching along the forest road.
“Huh! Ain’t the day for the mail,” a man said. They stood in silence, watching as a small, dusty cushion-car emerged from deep shadow into the yellow light of the street. It came slowly along to the plaza, swung left, pulled to a stop beside the boardwalk before a corrugated metal store front lettered BLAUVELT PROVISION COMPANY. The canopy popped open and a man stepped down. He was of medium height, dressed in a plain city-type black coverall. He studied the store front, the street, then turned to look across at the men. He came across toward them.
“Which of you men is Blauvelt?” he asked as he came up. His voice was unhurried, cool. His eyes flicked over the men.
A big, youngish man with a square face and sun-bleached hair lifted his chin.
“Right here,” he said. “Who’re you?”
“Crewe is the name. Disposal Officer, War Materiel Commission.” The newcomer looked up at the great machine looming over them. “Bolo Stupendous, Mark XXV,” he said. He glanced at the men’s faces, fixed on Blauvelt. “We had a report that there was a live Bolo out here. I wonder if you realize what you’re playing with?”
“Hell, that’s just Bobby,” a man said.
“He’s town mascot,” someone else said.
“This machine could blow your town off the map,” Crewe said. “And a good-sized piece of jungle along with it.”
Blauvelt grinned; the squint lines around his eyes gave him a quizzical look.
“Don’t go getting upset, Mr. Crewe,” he said. “Bobby’s harmless—”
“A Bolo’s never harmless, Mr. Blauvelt. They’re fighting machines, nothing else.”
Blauvelt sauntered over and kicked at a corroded treadplate. “Eighty-five years out in this jungle is kind of tough on machinery, Crewe. The sap and stuff from the trees eats chromalloy like it was sugar candy. The rains are acid, eat up equipment damn near as fast as we can ship it in here. Bobby can still talk a little, but that’s about all.”
“Certainly it’s deteriorated; that’s what makes it dangerous. Anything could trigger its battle reflex circuitry. Now, if you’ll clear everyone out of the area, I’ll take care of it.”
“You move kind of fast for a man that just hit town,” Blauvelt said, frowning. “Just what you got in mind doing?”
“I’m going to fire a pulse at it that will neutralize what’s left of its computing center. Don’t worry; there’s no danger—”
“Hey,” a man in the rear rank blurted. “That mean he can’t talk any more?”
“That’s right,” Crewe said. “Also, he can’t open fire on you.”
“Not so fast, Crewe,” Blauvelt said. “You’re not messing with Bobby. We like him like he is.” The other men were moving forward, forming up in a threatening circle around Crewe.
“Don’t talk like a fool,” Crewe said. “What do you think a salvo from a Continental Siege Unit would do to your town?”
Blauvelt chuckled and took a long cigar from his vest pocket. He sniffed it, called out: “All right, Bobby—fire one!”
There was a muted clatter, a sharp click! from deep inside the vast bulk of the machine. A tongue of pale flame licked from the cannon’s soot-rimmed bore. The big man leaned quickly forward, puffed the cigar alight. The audience whooped with laughter.
“Bobby does what he’s told, that’s
all,” Blauvelt said. “And not much of that.” He showed white teeth in a humorless smile.
Crewe flipped over the lapel of his jacket; a small, highly polished badge glinted there. “You know better than to interfere with a Concordiat officer,” he said.
“Not so fast, Crewe,” a dark-haired, narrow-faced fellow spoke up. “You’re out of line. I heard about you Disposal men. Your job is locating old ammo dumps, abandoned equipment, stuff like that. Bobby’s not abandoned. He’s town property. Has been for near thirty years.”
“Nonsense. This is battle equipment, the property of the Space Arm—”
Blauvelt was smiling lopsidedly. “Uh-uh. We’ve got salvage rights. No title, but we can make one up in a hurry. Official. I’m the Mayor here, and District Governor.”
“This thing is a menace to every man, woman, and child in the settlement,” Crewe snapped. “My job is to prevent tragedy—”
“Forget Bobby,” Blauvelt cut in. He waved a hand at the jungle wall beyond the tilled fields. “There’s a hundred million square miles of virgin territory out there,” he said. “You can do what you like out there. I’ll even sell you provisions. But just leave our mascot be, understand?”
Crewe looked at him, looked around at the other men.
“You’re a fool,” he said. “You’re all fools.” He turned and walked away, stiff-backed.
In the room he had rented in the town’s lone boardinghouse, Crewe opened his baggage and took out a small, gray-plastic-cased instrument. The three children of the landlord who were watching from the latchless door edged closer.
“Gee, is that a real star radio?” the eldest, a skinny, long-necked lad of twelve asked.
“No,” Crewe said shortly. The boy blushed and hung his head.
“It’s a command transmitter,” Crewe said, relenting. “It’s designed for talking to fighting machines, giving them orders. They’ll only respond to the special shaped-wave signal this puts out.” He flicked a switch, and an indicator light glowed on the side of the case.