by John Ringo
The few became a few dozen, a few score, a few hundred… fifty thousand. The song moved down Via España and up Avenida Central faster than the people coming toward the great iglesia could walk.
“Non nobis Domine non nobis
Sed Nomini tuo da gloriam
Sed Nomini tuo da gloriam
Non nobis Domine…”
The song echoed through the City. Fifty thousand became half a million. Soldiers in the trenches listening to their small radios listened and joined. It became eight hundred thousand. The music reached the refugee-swollen town of Colon the same way: one million. To the north, in the cities of Boston and New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, it was heard: one point five million. In Cuba the people heard and remembered: three million. In Bogotá, still holding out… in England, where men still slept in their beds… among Bundeswehr and the new-old Waffen SS watching along the Rhine… with the Red Guard, fighting along the Dnepr…
“Non nobis Domine non nobis…”
Interlude
Darien Province, Republic of Panama
It was basically a small crocodilian. Colored a dull green, its length at a bit over seven feet was average for its species and age. Aquatic, as were all its sort, it hunted through the murky stream looking for something to eat. It was known to go after small pigs and other animals, invertebrates large and small, and — in places where they were to be found, far south of here — even to feast on the fierce piranha.
The caiman had few needs: to feed, to rest, to rut. At the moment, feeding was number one. Thus, eyes and nose above the coloring water, it hunted.
Ahead was a curious splashing, as of a herd of animals crossing the river. On closer examination, it was a herd of rather large animals. This might mean food as it had in the past; the animals themselves looked too big but there was always the chance they may have taken the kids out for a Sunday stroll. Hope springs eternal and the caiman was either not bright enough, or was self-confident enough, that the thought of danger didn’t enter its little brain. Submerging, it swam over.
“Tell me if you see any leeches, Zira. I hate getting those things on me.”
Voice calm, the Kenstain assured Guanamarioch that he would indeed keep a watch out. Even so, the damned nuisances were so nearly invisible until they attached themselves that Ziramoth really had no expectation of being able to keep them off no matter how diligently he guarded. Nonetheless, Ziramoth looked at the dozens of oozing sores dotting the Kessentai’s torso and resolved to at least try.
Other than the fear of leeches, the water itself was warm and even soothing. Guanamarioch thought that, were his people ever able to rid themselves of this world’s multifarious pests, bathing in such a stream might be a welcome activity. In particular, and despite the fear of the leeches, the warm water passing over the God King’s reproductive member was most pleasant.
As mentioned, the caiman was only of average size. Thus, when it came upon the legs of the beasts walking through the river bed it was momentarily nonplussed. It knew, instinctively, that there was no way it was going to be able to take down a creature with legs the size of those. Almost, the caiman felt a surge of frustration at the unfairness of it all. Almost, it wept crocodile tears.
Perhaps the crocodile-headed god of the caiman smiled upon it. There, just there, just ahead, was something of a proper size for the caiman to eat. It dangled and danced enticingly, as if presenting itself for supper. The caiman swished its tail, and inclined its body and head to line up properly on the tempting bait.
“You know, Zira, this isn’t so bad. One could even… AIAIAI!”
Ziramoth’s yellow eyes went wide in his head as his friend exploded out of the water, dragging a dark creature almost like one of the People — barring only the shorter legs and two too few of them — behind it. The eyes went wider still as the Kenstain realized just what part of his friend connected him with this alien predator.
Up Guanamarioch flew, legs churning furiously. Down the God King splashed. Both trips he screamed continuously: “AIAIAI!”
Once down, Guano tried to bend over to catch the creature. No use; he couldn’t quite reach. Leeches be damned, still shrieking he rolled over on his back, scrambling for purchase on his unseen attacker.
Another half roll and Guanamarioch cried out, “Getitoffgetitoffgetitoff!” before his head plunged back into the water.
Normally steady as a rock, Zira didn’t know what to do in this case. Fortunately — or unfortunately, depending on one’s point of view — one of Guano’s normals saw no real problem. Instead, it saw the twin opportunities of relieving its god from pain and at the same time providing some much needed nourishment to his pack.
Zira had only just realized what the normal intended and begun to shout, “St — ” when the boma blade swung, taking the biting creature’s head off but at the same time removing about five inches of the Kessentai’s reproductive organ.
Unsteadily, the God King rolled back over and struggled to its feet. His eyes were wider with shock even than Zira’s had been. For a moment it struggled with the realization of what had just happened to it. Once it made that realization, the God King bowed its head…
For the first time since the beginning of the invasion of the human world, a Kessentai unabashedly wept.
Chapter 32
Remember, me boys, though the Irish fight well
The Russian artillery’s hotter than hell.
— “The Kerry Recruit”
Nata Line, Republic of Panama
“Demons of Shit! Will these damnable trenches never end?”
“We’ve fought through at least eight sets of them, Binastarion, and there seems no end. The loss is frightful.”
Including where the trenches ran into the mountains, the Nata Line was approximately eighteen kilometers in breadth and about seven deep. The Posleen were — in places, anyway — about five kilometers into it. That ninety or so square kilometers was carpeted, in places two or three deep, with the People’s dead. Though the ground below often showed through, it was possible to walk those five kilometers forward or eighteen across without ever once touching it, and having to leap to get from one body to the next only every other step.
Even where the ground showed, the green grass of this world was stained completely yellow with the flesh and blood of the invaders.
“Should I have struck south, do you think, AS, instead of trying to force this line?”
“You couldn’t have, lord. The People were here and there was nothing to eat behind them. It was fight through or die.”
Binastarion directed his tenar down to examine one of the bunkers from which the threshkreen had directed such fanatical and deadly fire at the People. The bunker was torn open, apparently by the blast of a plasma cannon.
“It seems too small,” the God King observed, “too small to hold even one of the vile creatures.”
“Move me closer, Binastarion, and let me examine it.”
When the clan chief had done so, and after a short moment for analysis, the AS announced, “It is too small, Kessentai. This repeater was set on automatic. No threshkreen manned it except, perhaps, to begin its cycle of fire.”
Setting his tenar down and dismounting, the Kessentai peered himself at the curious device, Binastarion saw that his AS was correct. The weapon had a small muzzle, perhaps a claw’s width in caliber. Around that was a larger tube. He tapped the tube with a claw. It sloshed as if full of some coolant, water perhaps. Behind the tube was a block of machined metal with a wood-covered handle on one side. A belt of the heavy metal-colored ammunition the threshkreen favored ran out the side with the tube to a huge drum.
On the other side of the weapon, a pile of the little brass casings had filled a deep hole and begun to build a small hill. Underneath, the block was connected with the weapon’s tripodal stand. The curved tube that connected the two rear legs of the stand had a toothed ridge running along it.
“I surmise that the recoil of the weapon causes
the mechanism connecting the block and the stand to engage the teeth on that curved horizontal connector and traverse the weapon from one side to the other. Perhaps there is a reversing mechanism that causes it to traverse back when it reaches one end of the arc of traverse or the other. That little locking mechanism on the curved horizontal bar looks like a way to control the arc of fire. To ascertain that, though, would take more examination than I can do without the thing being disassembled, Binastarion.”
“No…” the God King answered slowly. “I think you’re right. It also explains how the threshkreen are able to get away when they are forced to abandon one of their fortified lines without leaving many bodies behind. They set these things off just before they vacate. Bastards!”
“The bastards are almost through, Suarez. I think we need to begin the fire plan now.”
Suarez sighed. Boyd was a good man, a fine dictator. As a matter of fact he was the best dictator the country had ever seen, not least because he’d made it so plain from the beginning that he detested the job. He also had more actual combat experience than Suarez.
For all that, however, he was not a professional soldier. Suarez was.
“Not yet. They still have uncommitted reserves that are out of our fire prep area. We’ll pay a heavy price, and possibly fail to liberate the west, if we don’t catch nearly all of them.”
“But there’re only three more trench lines left, Suarez. Three! And the infantry divisions holding the line are beginning to fall apart!”
“They won’t fall apart, Dictator. I’ve lined the rear with military police with orders to summarily execute anyone found leaving the front,” Suarez answered calmly. Seeing the look of horror on Boyd’s face, Suarez explained, “Why do you suppose MPs are given pistols, Dictator? They have them for just that purpose. Always have and likely always will.”
Boyd thought back to his days as a rifleman in France and Belgium. Momentarily, he shivered. “I hate MPs.”
“Everyone hates MPs,” Suarez answered. “Everyone complains about prostitution, too. But cops and hookers serve a valid social function. I shudder to think where society would be without both in plenty.
“But, in any case, relax. The last two trench lines are the most solid. They’ve each got nearly two hundred of the autoguns. You remember? Those water-cooled machine guns on the recoil-operated traversing mechanism? Pity the gringos couldn’t have given us a thousand of their manjacks. But making do is a Latin virtue, I think. Oh, and I’ve ordered in the Nata Line’s Corps’ last infantry division to shore it up. It will hold until the LRRPs in the mountains to the north report that the enemy is fully committed to the attack, with no reserves out of our kill zone.”
Lieutenant Valparaiso, 1st Cazador Battalion, wondered if the boredom of his mission made up for missing the action to the east along the Nata Line. Actually, he and his men yearned to be in on the fighting. Still, it wasn’t as if their job wasn’t important. Master of the Horse Suarez had personally spoken to his battalion before they had moved into these hills to dig in deep hide positions overlooking the open ground to the south. From the battalion’s deep hides, wires ran back to communications nodes on the other side of the Cordillera Central. From there, the high command was kept informed.
“There is nothing,” Suarez had said, “nothing more important than the information you men will provide. No, you won’t get any medals… at least, if things work out properly you won’t. But what you will tell us is key to the defense.”
Bloody boring goddamned key, Valparaiso thought as he looked over the huge Posleen pack that simply sat, or lay down, in his field of view below. Miserable alien bastards haven’t budged since… oh, oh, what’s this?
The tenar which had been hovering listlessly or occasionally gathering by twos, threes and fours — even aliens felt the need to shoot the shit with each other, Valpariaso surmised — suddenly took on a new energy. The blocks of the smaller, crestless aliens arose to their feet as the flying sleds moved to take positions at the front of each.
Looking through his binoculars, the lieutenant counted. Each block is about forty by ten of the aliens. There are thirty-seven blocks on the front and they appear to be about thirty deep, or maybe a bit more. Call it… umm…
“Holy shit!” Valparaiso cursed. To his radio telephone operator he said, “Get on the horn and tell headquarters that there’s nearly half a million of the bastards moving east. Do it, soldier. Now!”
“There! I told you they would commit, at last.” Suarez pointed one finger at the map being updated by a trooper from the headquarters operations shop.
Boyd looked at the map and asked, “How long until they’re in range?”
“Between midnight and two,” Suarez answered, after spending a moment in crude calculation.
“And that’s the last of their uncommitted troops?”
The trooper at the map answered, “Dictador, the LRRPs say there is nothing behind these except individual Posleen who are acting wildly.”
“They go feral,” Suarez explained. “If their God Kings are killed and no other takes them under control the normals revert to type. They will be small danger, when we roll through.”
Boyd bit at his lower lip, thinking, It’s all or nothing. One big roll of the dice and my country lives or dies. But there’s nothing to be done to fix that that we have not already done.
“Tell SOUTHCOM. We begin at one in the morning.”
Sante Fe, Veraguas Province, Republic of Panama
The suit’s radio crackled, “Colonel Snyder, you’ve been fucking off too long already. Get your ass up.”
“Wha… wha… WHAT? I wasn’t sleeping, Sergeant…”
The suit was on listening silence. The sender — General Page, himself, thought Snyder — didn’t hear. The radio repeated, “Snyder, wake up.”
“AID, come alert.”
The AID answered, “About fucking time.”
Snyder ignored the jab. It was, after all, his fault if anyone’s that his AID had acquired a foul… mouth.
“Last calling station, this is Lieutenant Colonel Wes Snyder. Repeat.”
“Snyder this is Page. It’s a go. Get your battalion awake and prepare to execute your mission.”
“Wilco,” the officer answered. “AID, wake up the commanders and staff.”
“Wilco,” the AID echoed and began sending the signals to the other AIDs.
“A Company reports… B Company; a man who won’t fuck won’t fight… Combat Support; ready to rock… Headquarters’ Headhunters; ready to take heads.”
“Gentlemen… oh, and you ladies, too, Alpha Company. Awaken your commands. We’re going in shortly.”
Nata Line, Republic of Panama
The moon was high and bright overhead as the Artificial Sentience announced, “Binastarion, I’ve found the metal threshkreen.”
“Show me, AS.”
The glowing map appeared in thin air beside the tenar. “They’ve been waiting behind us? Oh, demons. Does this mean what I think it does, AS?”
“Yes, Kessentai. We’re… what’s that phrase the threshkreen use? Ah, yes. We’re fucked. Binastarion, look east.”
The Artificial Sentience needn’t have directed his chief’s attention. The sky to the east was lit up, as if by several thousand powerful strobes. “Artillery?”
“I think so; that and their mortars.”
Binastarion’s sinking feeling managed to sink further. “How many?”
“I think between two and three thousand, my lord. Probably closer to three. And… oh, demon shit… north and south, Binastarion. Rockets. From hundreds of launchers.”
“We can engage the rockets automatically, AS,” the God King insisted.
“No. I am sorry. We can’t. I can sense them through the mountains and hills, while they are still accelerating. By the time they pop over, though, they must have expended their fuel and gone ballistic. I can sense them, still, and count them. But it would take a major reprogramming for me or the oth
er automated defenses to engage. And there’s no time.”
“How many shells are we facing?” Binastarion asked, a trace of hope in his voice.
The first of the threshkreen shells had almost landed among the host as the AS answered, “There are twenty-one thousand
two hundred and forty-seven projectiles in the air now, and the rate of fire is not slowing. And… oh, Kessentai, I am so sorry. The spirit—
of-the-dead ships are now firing too. Make that twenty-one thousand four hundred and fifty-one… sixty-nine… twenty-two thousand five hundred and ninety…”
USS Des Moines, Southwest of the Nata Line, Bay of Panama
Broadside on, Daisy and Sally took turns blasting away at the Posleen infestation. The flashes of their guns, firing at maximum rate, lit up the depths below. The concussion sent fish, some stunned but mostly dead, floating to the surface.
Down below, in a hold no one ever visited but the Indowy and the avatar, Sintarleen told Daisy’s avatar, “It is time.” The Indowy’s left hand held Morgen, the cat, while his right stroked the creature’s back. The cat purred audibly.
The avatar bit her lip and nodded. Then, nervousness palpable in her voice, she said, “Let us do it. Now, while there is still time to feel my captain’s touch.”
The bat-faced alien’s fingers reached out and played over the control surfaces of the tank. Then he placed his hand on a silvery panel. There was a whooshing sound as the top of the tank slid away. As the mist inside the tank dissipated, looking down, the avatar and the Indowy saw a perfect female body and an ethereal face framed by long blonde hair. The mouth on the face opened as the eyes flew wide. The body gasped as it drew in its first breath.
As the body and mind in the tank fully wakened, the avatar faded. Yes, it could have been maintained. But Daisy the woman who was also Daisy the ship and Daisy the AID and even Daisy the soul wanted all of her consciousness in that body, at least for the moment.